2. A health creating society
• Modern societies actively market
unhealthy lifestyles
WHO European Region
Building a health creating society
Nigel Crisp
Health and Horticulture:
building a health creating society
4th July 2016
Nigel Crisp
3. A health creating society
• Modern societies actively market
unhealthy lifestyles
WHO European Region
Building a health creating society
Nigel Crisp
4. A health creating society
• Modern societies actively market
unhealthy lifestyles
WHO European Region
• Health is made at home, hospitals
are for repairs
Traditional African saying
Building a health creating society
Nigel Crisp
5. The UK and Europe
• Children
• Older people
• Mental illness
• Inequalities
Building a health creating society
Nigel Crisp
6. Everyone has a role to play…
A health creating society where
everyone – gardeners, architects,
teachers, employers, citizens,
business - has a role to play in
creating healthy robust citizens and
communities
Building a health creating society
Nigel Crisp
7. Building a health creating
society
In 1948 all the people and organisations
involved in health care came together
around the common goal of health care
for all
Now we need everyone and everybody
that affects health to come together in a
common goal to build a health creating
society
Building a health creating society
Nigel Crisp
8. A health creating society
• Modern societies actively market
unhealthy lifestyles
WHO European Region
Building a health creating society
Nigel Crisp
9. Session 1: Strategic & academic evidence: health, wellbeing
& horticulture
1000 Dr William Bird (GP & Intelligent Health)
Horticulture, Health & Wellbeing: a GP’s perspective
1010 Dr Justin Varney (Public Health England)
How Horticulture & PHE can work together
1020 Dr Agnes van den Berg (Environmental Psychologist)
An International Perspective: Greenspace & Health
1035 Dr Ross Cameron (Sheffield University)
Gardening: Value in terms of Human Health & Wellbeing
1045 Questions on Session 1
10. Dr William Bird MRCGP MBE
4th July 2016
Health and
Horticulture
Conference
A GP’s
Perspective
30. Green or Blue
Willingness to visit 0-10
0
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
5.96 Urban
Blue Space p= <0.01
4.89 Urban
Green Space P= <0.01
3.66 Urban
No Nature
5.83 Woodland
open countryside
7.68 coast
7.40 open water
White M.P., Smith A., Humphryes K., Pahl S., Snelling D. and Depledge M. (2010) Blue space: the importance of water for
preference, affect and restorativeness ratings of natural and built scenes. Journal of Environmental Psychology 30, 482–493.
36. Exploring the local area (66%)
Getting fit (54%)
Having fun (54%)
Spending time with friends or
family (53%)
and feeling more healthy (52%)
Winning Prizes (13%)
40. Dr Justin Varney
National Lead forAdult Health and Wellbeing
Justin.varney@phe.gov.uk
How Horticulture and
Public Health can work
together to improve the
health of the nation
41. About Public Health England
• We protect and improve the
nation's health and wellbeing, and
reduce health inequalities.
• Locally focussed
o 4 regions, 9 centres
o 8 Knowledge & Intelligence hubs
o Other local presence
• Key roles:
1. System leadership
2. Health protection
3. Local support
41 How Horticulture and PH can work together
42. 42
Overview
• The common challenge on Non-communicable
disease
• Responding to the challenge
• The evidence: Horticulture and health
• Looking ahead
How Horticulture and PH can work together
43. The current and future challenges
for health and social care in the UK
•Addressing the health and wellbeing gap
•Healthy life expectancies gap
•Increasing burden of preventable disease
•Persistent health inequalities
•Addressing the care and quality gap
•Persistent variations in healthcare
•Addressing the financial gap
•Opportunity costs of not having a prevention focus
The need for a system wide approach of
communities supported by their NHS, local
authorities and voluntary sectors.
43 How Horticulture and PH can work together
44. 44 PHE Conference 16 September 2015
Changes in causes of Disability
Adjusted Life Years 1990-2013
Source: Newton et al. (2015) Changes in health in England, with analysis by English regions and areas of deprivation, 1990–
2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013. The Lancet
www.thelancet.com/pdfs/journals/lancet/PIIS0140-6736(15)00195-6.pdf
46. 46
Disease risk factors in England
Newton et al. (2015) Changes in health in England, with analysis by English regions and areas of deprivation, 1990–
2013: a systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2013. The Lancet
47. 47
To improve & protect the nation’s health & wellbeing and improve the health of the poorest, fastest
Outcome 1) Increased healthy life expectancy – taking into account health quality as well as length of life
Outcome 2) Reduced differences in life expectancy between communities (through greater
improvements in more disadvantaged communities)
Improving the wider
determinants of
health
1
19 indicators, including:
• People with mental
illness or disability in
settled accommodation
• Sickness absence rate
• Statutory
homelessness
• % of population
affected by noise
• Use of green space
• Social connectedness
• Fuel poverty
Health improvement2
24 indicators, including:
• Excess weight
• Alcohol-related
admissions to hospital
• Proportion of physically
active and inactive
adults
• Self-reported wellbeing
• Falls and falls injuries
in the over 65s
Health protection3
7 indicators, including:
• Air pollution
• Public sector
organisations with
Board approved
sustainable
development
management plans
Healthcare & public
health preventing
premature mortality
4
16 indicators, including:
• Infant mortality
• Mortality from causes
considered preventable
• Mortality from
cardiovascular disease
• Mortality from
respiratory diseases
• Excess winter deaths
How Horticulture and PH can work together
How PHE is addressing these challenges
48. 48
How Horticulture and PH can work together
Horticulture & Health
Spectrum of intervention types,
methodologies and strength of
evidence
• Therapeutic garden schemes
• Green Gyms
• Health walks
• Therapeutic landscapes
• Garden schemes
• Workplace Wellbeing Charter
49. How the money flows
49 http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/sites/files/kf/media/nhs-structure-2015.pdf
50. An alternative guide to the NHS
50 http://www.kingsfund.org.uk/projects/nhs-65/alternative-guide-new-nhs-england
The alternative guide to the NHS
in England
51. Key Commissioning Priorities
51 How Horticulture and PH can work together
• Health
• Acute pressures (A&E, GP apt)
• Recurrent or prolonged treatment costs
• Public Health
• Preventable mortality & morbidity
• Obesity – predominantly childhood
• Life course issues – childhood, old age
• Social Care
• Adult social care costs for residential/domiciliary care
• Employers
• Productivity & sickness absence
TIMESCALE OF
RETURN ON
INVESTMENT
52. 52
Evidence
Growing and strengthening evidence
base for cost-effective interventions
delivered by horticulture
Particularly strong for:
• Mental health / Dementia
• Physical activity
• Wellbeing
• Air quality
Growing evidence base in relation to
physical health, with some good
evidence around initiatives such as
green gyms
How Horticulture and PH can work together
53. Cultural commissioning: a public health perspective
Working together
53 How Horticulture and PH can work together
Historically commissioning of horticulture
schemes for health has been very small scale
primarily non-recurrent pilots & grants.
Moving to sustainable provision requires
cultural shifts for both commissioners and
providers.
Recognition that horticulture is a wide spectrum
encompassing big business and a large
industrial workforce
Recognition that providers need to deliver the
outcomes commissioners are commissioning
for and in a measurable way.
Lots of learning from cultural and physical
activity sectors who are on the same journey.
54. Looking ahead
• Ageing population with growing
burdens of multiple health
challenges
• Working age is increasing and
millennials will often have
portfolio careers
• Public sector is refocusing and
prioritising on outcome based
commissioning
• Inclusive universalism vs
targeted minority approaches
54 How Horticulture and PH can work together
55. Prof. Dr. Agnes van den Berg
An international perspective:
Greenspace and health
58. Experimental research
Tyrväinen, L., Ojala, A., Korpela, K., Lanki, T., Tsunetsugu, Y., & Kagawa, T. (2014). The influence of urban green
environments on stress relief measures: A field experiment. Journal of Environmental Psychology, 38, 1-9.
Positive feelings Self esteem Vitality
Before After Before After Before After
69. For many specimens of Homo
westernmanicus –
Gardens provide the bridge to the
natural world
70. Background to
Gardens
• Western Society = 90% live in urban areas.
• UK - 87% households have access to a garden (Gibbons et al., 2011).
• Gardens = 22-36% of the total urban area (Mathieu et al., 2007).
• In UK = 1/3 to ½ of urban green space (Loram et al., 2007).
• But decreasing area dedicated to gardens - infill & new houses having
smaller gardens. (Smith, 2010).
• Under-represented in the Green Infrastructure equation (Cameron et al., 2012).
71. Reported & Derived Benefits
(e.g. Cameron, 2014)
Green Space
• Pain relief
• Blood pressure
• Heart rate
• Less frequent illness
• Improved cognitive function
• Thermal comfort
Gardens
• Reduced mortality
• Higher bone density, less
osteoporosis
• Cholesterol levels
• Reduces onset of dementia
Regular gardening / gardening like
activities thought to help offset
• Heart disease
• Ischemic stroke
• Type 2 diabetes
• Hypertension
• Anxiety
• Depression
• Certain types of cancer
72. Gardens as Therapeutic Landscapes
• Landscapes with natural features,
provide greatest restoration from
stress (Ivarsson and Hagerhall, 2008) .
• Even within these – restoration
promoted by presence of flowers
and water – stronger correlation
than presence of animals, trees,
hills, natural aromas or sounds
(Ogunseitan, 2005).
• Design of garden may be important
in offsetting stress associated with
work, commuting, family life etc.,
but this warrants further
investigation.
73. Gardens & Gardening
• Under-researched in Nature-Health agenda
• Rel. little info on private gardens
– (more on community gardens / allotments & hort
therapy)
• H&WB benefits potentially large
• Heterogeneous landscapes though - in typology, but
also uses and attitudes
74. Gardens & Gardening
• Associated with: (Clayton, 2007; Blair et al., 1991; Dallosso et al., 1988).
– Providing a form of ‘retreat’
– Interacts with nature
– Place to be creative
– Play and recreation
– Socialise (family and friends)
– Utilitarian – grow food
– Physical exercise (depending on task)
– Identity – self–expression
– Also though
• Pressure – chores – social expectations - keep up with the Jones’
• Extent of benefits may relate to individual’s attitude to
gardening.
76. 1. Immediate Access
• Little organisation required.
• Frequent activity & repetition
– fits into short periods of
down-time in busy working
lives.
• Children - easy access to
nature and food education.
78. Much of the immediate challenge is
about moving from a sedentary to an
active lifestyle
79. • Food gardening used to encourage physical
activity in children and encourage healthy diet
(Castro et al., 2013)
• Community gardeners had significantly lower
BMIs for same gender syblings (−1.88 female)
(−1.33 male).
• Also lower probability for overweight or obese
than otherwise similar neighbours (Zick et al., 2013).
81. 3. Gardens as
Restorative Landscapes
• Self-absorbing – Soft fascination. Attention
Restoration Theory – ‘being mentally away from
the stressors’
• Repeat activity – fascination led
• Keen gardeners rarely need much motivation to
garden!
• Ecological, rather than anthropogenic, view of
the world.
82. Restorative Landscapes
• Older – adults.
– Gardening more than a casual leisure
pursuit - critical to their physical and
psychological wellbeing. (Scott et al., 2014) .
• Allotment gardening – Single session
showed significant improvement in
self-esteem (P<0.05) and mood
(P<0.001) (Wood et al., 2015).
• For patients suffering severe stress /
mod-mild depression - significant
reductions in primary healthcare
visits and inpatient psychiatric care
when placed on a garden orientated
rehabilitation programme. (Währborg et al.,
2014)
83. 4. Creativity – Self Expression
• Gardeners - control over the design / management .
• Positive psychological aspects - self-esteem, feeling of
achievement and fulfilment of talent.
• Form of art therapy.
85. Session 1: Strategic & academic evidence: health, wellbeing
& horticulture
1000 Dr William Bird (GP & Intelligent Health)
Horticulture, Health & Wellbeing: a GP’s perspective
1010 Dr Justin Varney (Public Health England)
How Horticulture & PHE can work together
1020 Dr Agnes van den Berg (Environmental Psychologist)
An International Perspective: Greenspace & Health
1035 Dr Ross Cameron (Sheffield University)
Gardening: Value in terms of Human Health & Wellbeing
1045 Questions on Session 1