Long-Term Effects of Mountain Hiking vs. Forest Therapy on Physical and Mental Health of Couples: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Author:

Huber Daniela1,Freidl Johanna1ORCID,Pichler Christina1ORCID,Bischof Michael1,Kiem Martin2ORCID,Weisböck-Erdheim Renate1,Squarra Gabriella3,De Nigris Vincenzo4,Resnyak Stefan4,Neberich Marcel1ORCID,Bordin Susanna1,Zechner René1,Hartl Arnulf1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Ecomedicine, Paracelsus Medical University Salzburg, 5020 Salzburg, Austria

2. Certified Nature and Forest Therapy Guide, 39010 Tisens, Italy

3. Certified Forest-Health-Trainer, 83435 Bad Reichenhall, Germany

4. Institute of Sports Medicine, South Tyrol Health Authority, 39100 Bozen, Italy

Abstract

Background: Lifelong physical activity is related to longer health span, which is reflected at an individual level, and is of substantial socioeconomic relevance. Sedentary lifestyles, on the other hand, pose an increasingly major public health problem. In addition, the COVID-19 pandemic had a negative impact on activity levels and well-being. Previous research indicates that contact with nature might improve exercise levels as well as well-being. Methods: This randomized, controlled clinical trial (ANKER-study) investigated the effects of two types of nature-based therapies (forest therapy and mountain hiking) in couples (FTG: n = 23; HG: n = 22;) with a sedentary or inactive lifestyle on health-related quality of life, relationship quality and other psychological and physiological parameters. Results: The results of this study displayed that healthy and highly functioning women and men with sedentary lifestyles mentally benefit from contact with nature (quality of life, satisfaction with life, mood, internal and external health-related control beliefs). The gender-specific effect on women is most visible in the physiological outcomes (hemopoietic system, aerobic capacity, skeletal muscle mass and hydration) of mountain hiking. Men and women showed small improvements in blood pressure as a result of the interventions. Conclusions: The ANKER-study provides a method for valid comparison of forest therapy interventions for the first time. Regarding the COVID-19 pandemic, the nature-based intervention presented could offer a multimodal contribution to maintaining a more active lifestyle, further contact with nature that affects peoples physical as well as mental health, and an improvement in social interaction.

Funder

Tourism Association of Algund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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