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Kitchener-Waterloo

Nature helps boost mental well-being for city kids, UW study finds

A research team took about 70 children for a walk around Kitchener, Ont., stopping at seven spots each with different urban and natural sights. Theyconsistently gave higher scores for the more natural areas and lower scores for areas busy with city life.

Researchers asked about 70 children aged 9 to 17 to share how they felt about areas of Kitchener

Here's why this family loves forest bathing

7 months ago
Duration 2:31
Close your eyes, take a deep breath and go on a forest-bathing adventure with the Latchman-Hornby family as they connect with nature at Huron Natural Area in Kitchener, Ont. Vashti Latchman says the practice has a calming effect on her three kids, Roderick, Raya and James Hornby.

Being surrounded by nature for even just a few minutes can boost the health and well-being of young people living in cities.

That's according to a newUniversity of Waterloo study.About 70 children aged 9 to 17 in Kitchener were involved.

Lead researcher Leia Minaker and her team took the children for a walk around the city, stopping at seven spots with very different urban and natural sights. At the end of the walk, the participants were asked to report back on how each stop made them feel.

Minaker saidthe kidsconsistently gave higher scores for stops in more natural areasand lower scores for areas that were busy with city life.

"The main reason that we wanted to ask kids how they were feeling in this space is because kids are typically ignored in any kind of planning or city building decision that will affect them," Minaker said.

"We really wanted to look at how children and adolescents are experiencing these different places because all of the decisions that adults are making are affecting them and they don't usually get a say."

happy family sits on a log surrounded by a forest
Vashti Latchman, far right,enjoys taking partin the free forest bathing classes with her kids, James, Raya and Roderick Hornby, right to left. The classes are hosted by the City of Kitchener. (Aastha Shetty/CBC)

Minaker said the about 70 children were led on a walk through the Iron Horse Trail, Victoria Park, Park Street and more urban areas in downtown Kitchener, including a transit stop on Charles Street.

"We weren't just interested in forestry;we wereinterested in all kinds of urban design elements," she said.

"What we found was that certain stopsproduced much higher ratings of anxious feelings ...and other [nature] spotshad much higher levels of calmness,reduced anxiety, much higher positive affect orhappiness or joyful feelings," Minaker said, adding thekids only spent about two to three minutes at each spot.

What is forest bathing?

The benefits of meditating while being surrounded by nature is not a new concept for forest bathers in Kitchener and aroundthe world.

The practice of forest bathing (also calledforest therapy or shinrin-yoku) originated in Japan in the 1980s. Today, the City of Kitchener hosts seasonal forest bathing programs in the Huron Natural Area. It is defined as the act ofpractising mindfulness while surrounded by a natural forest area.

One of the regular participants of the free classes in Kitchener is Vashti Latchman, whoenjoys taking partwith her kids: Roderick, Raya and James Hornby.

"I find taking them outside always can bring down the level of everything [including] fighting. It'sa fun activity," she said.

"I had read studies about the increase mental illness pandemic that's happening with kids and one of the methods they suggested was getting kids outside and into nature. So whenever there are opportunities to get them outside, that's what I do."

Roderick, 13, said he was skeptical at first.

"When I first heard it, I thought we were going to take a bath in the forest, but now it's kind of just really opening your senses to hear things, see things, feel things that you wouldn't have noticed before," he said.

"When you're ina city with lots of roads, Ifeel tense because there's so much going on aroundyou and it's hard to really focus on one thing. But when it's quiet like this, you can really zone in."