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Urban Kids Need Access to Nature for Mental, Physical Health — Healthcare Providers Must Play a Role

Children deprived of access to nature face higher levels of childhood asthma, obesity, developmental delays and toxic stress. It’s time for healthcare providers and conservation groups to work together to be part of the solution.

By Jackie Ostfeld and Stacy Stryer

In Detroit, the Detroit Outdoors collaborative has been introducing many local high schoolers to overnight camping for the first time. By providing gear, training and guidance, the goal is to inspire the students and equip them with the knowledge to spend more time outdoors.

For historically underserved communities — including majority Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC), or lower-income communities — programs like Detroit Outdoors can be key for preventing a number of chronic physical and mental conditions and improving overall well-being.

An estimated 59% of an individual’s health determinants can be positively influenced by nature-based health interventions, according to the Network for Excellence in Health Innovation. The solution is simpler than camping.

A recent National Survey of Children’s Health showed a statistically significant association between mental flourishing and the availability of neighborhood amenities for Black adolescents, including sidewalks, recreational centers, parks and libraries.

Yet the children who would potentially benefit the most from access to green spaces and safe outdoor recreational facilities have inequitable access to either quality nature or healthcare. It’s an unfortunate fact that lower-income and BIPOC neighborhoods have fewer quality parks and public green spaces.

A report from the Center for American Progress and Hispanic Access Fund found that 76% of people in lower-income communities of color live in nature-deprived places.

Not only do these communities face higher levels of childhood asthma, obesity, developmental delays and toxic stress, but these inequities are compounded by climate change, as regions of the country without adequate tree cover and water drainage disproportionately suffer from the effects of heat islands, flooding, vector-borne illnesses and mental distress.

It is time for healthcare providers and conservation groups to work together to be part of the solution.

Happy, healthy children are a shared goal of both groups, and a growing collection of research is showing that access to nature can make a huge difference, particularly in underserved communities.

Many medical associations directly related to improving the physical and mental health of patients do not have a policy statement or official recommendation related to outdoor time and barriers to equitable access.

In the same vein, many conservation organizations have not fully embraced the role healthcare advocates can play in their overall strategy.

There are already a number of efforts underway to improve equity in outdoor access, but we can greatly expand upon this by including healthcare advocates.

The current administration’s Nature in Communities Act recently invoked a 10-agency collaboration to work on nature access but, crucially, the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services — the federal driver of healthcare, particularly in underserved communities — is not listed as one of those agencies.

We are calling on healthcare providers, medical associations, conservation organizations and Congress to work together on advocating for outdoor time to improve human health for all and to increase environmental stewardship.

This can be done at the individual patient level through providers, at the societal level through education and impactful recommendations and at the federal level through legislation and collaboration.

The Outdoors for All Act is one way we can push for this. The bill, if passed, would formally establish the Outdoor Recreation Legacy Partnership program, a National Park Service grant program aimed at helping economically disadvantaged communities with little to no access to public outdoor recreation spaces.

It has funded dozens of projects, including the Belle Isle Park Athletic Complex in Detroit, Michigan; the Three Mile Creek Greenway Project in Mobile, Alabama; and the Bay Point Wetland Restoration and Public Access Project in California.

Support for this legislation would ensure that dozens more communities can receive backing for projects that will provide local children with more opportunities to spend time safely outdoors.

Originally published by Common Dreams.

Jackie Ostfeld is the Sierra Club Outdoors for All campaign director as well as chair of the Outdoors Alliance for Kids, both of which work to address outdoor equity issues and help more children and families gain access to nature.

Stacy Stryer is a board-certified pediatrician and the associate medical director for Park Rx America, which believes that access to nature is a health tool.



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