Abstract
Background
Medical residents commonly face compassion fatigue, burnout, anxiety, and depression. Studies of nature-based interventions show improved mental and physical health; few focus on healthcare providers.
Objective
To explore potential benefits of forest bathing for medical residents’ wellbeing.
Methods
Using the Association of Nature and Forest Therapy’s framework, we piloted a forest bathing intervention among medical residents with pre/post-participation surveys assessing perceptions of mindfulness and psychological wellbeing. Responses were analyzed using a Fisher’s exact test and Student’s t-test for independent samples.
Results
Fourteen of fifteen participants completed both surveys. We observed significantly improved mindfulness scores and expressions of feeling calm, vital, or creative, as well as a decreased sense of anxiety and depression. Nonsignificant trends towards decreased burnout and irritability were seen.
Conclusion
This quality improvement pilot demonstrates trends that forest bathing can improve medical residents’ psychological wellbeing and mindfulness. Further exploration of this intervention for healthcare providers is warranted.
Background
Burnout and mental health issues continue to plague healthcare providers, including trainees.1,2 While organizational and system changes are crucial to reversing these concerns, interventions which improve mental health and overall personal wellbeing are needed in the interim. 3 Mindfulness has been shown to improve wellbeing in healthcare providers, including medical residents.4,5 Shinrin Yoku (SY), or forest bathing, is a practice that encourages mindfulness through participants’ interactions with nature through their senses. It was developed by the Japanese government in 1982 in response to the growing physical and mental health problems in the Japanese population thought to be due to their population’s movement from rural to urban environments. 6 As part of SY, participants are encouraged to simply spend time in nature, metaphorically ‘bathing’ in the atmosphere of the forest (hence the term “forest bathing”). 6 In many ways, forest bathing and mindfulness are conceptually-related therapies. For those who have difficulty achieving a mindful state, the sensory focus of forest bathing may feel more intuitive. 7 SY has been studied in Japan since its inception and has shown improvements in cardiovascular, respiratory, and immune function, as well as benefits in mood.6,8
The Association of Nature and Forest therapy (ANFT), founded by psychologist Amos Clifford in 2012, uses forest bathing as the basis of its framework and is both trauma-informed and relational with the forest. 9 Clifford combined the Japanese concept of SY with his decades of experience in Zen meditation, psychotherapy, and wilderness guiding to create the framework for the practice of Forest Therapy (spending time in nature to invite healing interactions with nature). Forest Therapy incorporates five elements: an intention to connect with nature in a healing way, not rushing the experience, giving the experience full attention, practicing repeatedly over an extended period, and deepening the relationship with nature for the benefit of both humans and the non-human natural world. Participants are invited to partake in experiences that invite mindfulness, connection, and healing. While studies have shown a positive impact of using nature-based therapies similar to forest bathing in the general population, few studies have involved healthcare providers.
To explore the potential benefits of forest bathing on the anxiety, depression, and psychological stress experienced by healthcare providers, a quality improvement pilot program of forest bathing was conducted with a group of primary care-track Internal Medicine residents in the western part of the U.S.
Methods
As part of a quality improvement pilot program, 15 primary care-track Internal Medicine resident physicians participated in a 1.5 hour guided Nature and Forest Therapy walk (forest bathing) guided by two ANFT-certified forest therapy guides outdoors in a local urban botanic garden. This guided walk was conducted as part of an afternoon wellbeing session for these medical trainees, during which they were excused from clinical work. The wellbeing half-day also included a group coaching session prior to the forest bathing exercise; attendance for both sessions was expected. The ANFT guides donated their time to the Internal Medicine residency program for this pilot program.
Participants were e-mailed beforehand with information on the walk, weather preparedness, and safety. The walk was conducted in the Denver Botanic Gardens in January 2023. The temperature that day was approximately 20°F, and there was snow and ice on the grounds. The ANFT guides began the experience in a grove of trees, after participants had been invited to fill out the pre-participation survey. Following introductions, participants were led through the ANFT framework-based walk, which includes a sequence of simple sensory invitations in different spaces in the garden (eg, sight, smell, hearing, touch, taste). Participants are given permission to opt out or adapt the invitation to their own comfort levels. Within each invitation, noticing and interacting with the natural environment was emphasized. After each invitation, participants gathered in a circle and were given an opportunity to share their observations. The last invitation led participants to sit near a natural element of their choice and observe their surroundings for 20 minutes. Insulated seating pads were offered to mitigate the impact of the weather and season. The session concluded with participants gathering in a circle to share tea, snacks, and final thoughts. The entire experience lasted 1.5 hours. Participants were asked to complete un-linked pre- and post-participation surveys that were relayed to them using a QR code immediately prior to and following the experience, respectively. Surveys included the Mindful Attention Awareness (MAAS-5) Scale and additional wellbeing questions (see Appendix). 9 The MAAS-5 is an abbreviated mindfulness scale of the 15-element traditional MAAS and is felt to reliably assess the current experience of mindfulness in the participant.10,11 Surveys were housed in Formstack, which is a secure, web-based application for building and managing online surveys and databases.
To compare participants’ perceptions of their emotional state before and after their experience, we used a Fisher’s exact test. To evaluate whether participants’ MAAS-5 Scale score improved before and after their experience, we used a Student’s t-test for independent samples. Frequencies with percentages for categorical variables and means with standard deviations for continuous variables have been reported. Except where otherwise indicated, proportions discussed in the text refer to the composite of Strongly Agree/Agree or Strongly Agree/Somewhat Agree as appropriate. All data analysis was conducted using SAS Enterprise Guide 8.3 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC).
If a participant endorsed feeling depressed, our protocol was for follow-up with the program director who would have met with participants individually to assess wellbeing and connect them with appropriate resources. This protocol was approved by the Colorado Multiple Institutional Review Board as a Quality Improvement Project and thus Non-Human Subjects Research (#23-0914).
Results
Forest Bathing Walk.
All the participants (100%) would recommend this program to their colleagues.
Discussion
In this quality improvement pilot program, we explored the potential benefits of forest bathing on the personal wellbeing of Internal Medicine residents. Immediately after a 1.5 hour forest bathing exercise, we observed significant improvements in mindfulness scores and in expressions of feeling calm, vital, or creative. We also observed decreased expression of feeling anxious or depressed with a non-significant trend towards decreased burnout and irritability. The degree of these improved markers of personal wellbeing is very encouraging for their potential to positively impact resident physicians, especially given the small number of participants.
This pilot program is important given that factors related to burnout, compassion fatigue, and perceived stress are commonly experienced among healthcare providers, including medical residents.1,2 There is a growing body of evidence that nature-related interventions benefit the general population; however few studies explore their impact upon healthcare providers or medical residents.6,8 Those studies that exist show mostly positive outcomes, such as improved immune function in nurses taken on forest bathing walks, 12 improved subjective wellbeing among Chinese frontline workers observing 2-minute nature video clips, 13 and decreased cortisol and improved subjective mental health after healthcare workers participated in forest walks or woodworking. 14 One randomized control trial by Noushad et al (2022) looking at the effect of nature-based physical activity and trauma in healthcare workers, showed that nature-based physical activity significantly improved outcomes as a result of post-traumatic growth and also reduced traumatic stress. 15 Vermeesch et al. (2022) found that a nature-based intervention using electronic sensors and an application (NatureDose™) was a feasible intervention to reduce perceived stress and increase quality of life as it relates to burnout and compassion fatigue for undergraduate nursing students. 3 Their results contribute to the literature for nature-based interventions and center on maximizing opportunities for feasible, affordable, and sustainable stress-reduction interventions for undergraduate nursing students. 3
Another randomized controlled study looking at chronic burnout among health sciences faculty and medical residents by Kavanaugh et al (2022) showed that exposure to a nature and forest therapy walk showed conflicting results. 16 While their quantitative results did not show a difference in burnout symptoms after participating in a single SY walk between the control and intervention group, the qualitative data they gathered suggested improvements in mood and mental health. The authors note that they had great interest in their study, but they struggled to schedule participants due to time constraints, as this was conducted during the participants’ own time. 16 Their study concluded that as burnout symptoms slowly accumulate, prolonged exposure to nature therapy over time may also function to gradually improve wellbeing outcomes. 16
Limitations
While the trends observed in this quality improvement project demonstrate significant positive improvement upon the psychological wellbeing of medical residents after a brief respite from clinical work through forest bathing, it of course has limitations. Participation was mandatory for this cohort of medical residents and occurred in place of scheduled clinical work at the end of their workday, which may have limited their intrinsic desire to benefit from this exercise. However, mandatory participation may also have been a strength, as participants could not self-select for those who are more inclined to appreciate forest bathing over those who are not. For such a program to work among healthcare providers, carving dedicated time out of their work schedules to participate may be helpful and avoid ‘adding one more thing’ to their workdays. In addition, our surveys were taken immediately before and after the intervention and did not contain any linking variables unique to participants. As such, we are unable to directly assess changes within each participant. Rather, this analysis reflects changes across the group. Finally, this project reflects the immediate impact of one forest bathing experience; follow-up regarding the longitudinal impact upon participants should be further explored.
Conclusion
The results of this quality improvement pilot project of guided forest bathing among Internal Medicine residents are promising and signal the potential to improve medical residents’ psychological wellbeing and mindfulness. Further exploration of guided forest bathing amongst health care providers is warranted, including larger, longitudinal evaluation of this program.
Footnotes
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the Nature and Forest Therapy “Think Tank” and Drs. Stephanie Chang, Jonathan Kavanaugh, and Heidi Rogers for their insights and editorial input in the drafting of this manuscript.
Author Contributions
K.M., K.J., and K.O. all contributed to the conceptualization, methodology, investigation, resources, original draft preparation, review and editing, visualization, and supervision. K.J. additionally contributed to the data curation. A.V. contributed to draft review, revising, and editing. A.K and L.M. contributed to the methodology, original draft preparation, validation, formal analysis, draft review, editing. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript. All authors listed have contributed sufficiently to the project to be included as authors, and all those who are qualified to be authors are listed in the author byline.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Support for this project was provided by the Department of Medicine at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, CO. The funding source had no influence on the study design, collection, analysis, or interpretation of the data; the writing of this report; or the decision to submit this report for publication.
Ethical Statement
Pre- & Post-Participation Nature and Forest Bathing Survey
Thank you so much for your participation in the WellDOM Nature & Forest Therapy program.
We appreciate your input!
Pre-Participation
Post-Participation
Pre-Participation = I have not started the Nature & Forest Therapy Program yet.
Post-Participation = I completed the Nature & Forest Therapy Program.
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