Emily Sutherlin- 12/7/24 Forest Bathing

Phillips, A. L. (2011). A Walk in the Woods: Evidence builds that time spent in the natural world benefits human health. American Scientist, 99(4), 301–302. http://www.jstor.org/stable/23019378

This article is about how Anna Lena Phillips stated being intentional about visiting a river near her home because she hadn’t been going outside as much as she wanted to. She mentioned how she felt about spending more time outside and said she felt “better—calmer, more relaxed, clearer-headed” (Philips, 2011, p.301).  Forest bathing is essentially walking in the woods. Phillips talks about how Richard Louv's book Last Child in the Woods was a best seller in the US because it explores the relationship between children's development and our natural world. Philips talks about evidence reinforcing her feeling that forest bathing is beneficial. There are well-known studies by Richard S. Ulrich, who discovered that when people are in surgery recovery rooms with a window with a view of nature, those patients need less pain medicine than those with a view of a brick wall. (Philips, 2011, p.301). Another study found that trees in people's neighborhoods made them feel safer. Another survey by Qing Li found that when people spend time in forests, they have lower blood pressure and noradrenaline levels.

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