'Into the Wild': A meta-synthesis of talking therapy in natural outdoor spaces.

Published
March 18, 2020
Journal
Clinical psychology review
PICOID
a38f32a8
DOI
Citations
60
Keywords
Biophilia hypothesis, Clinical psychology, Ecological systems, Ecopsychology, Nature exposure, Walking therapy
Copyright
Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Patients/Population/Participants

322 practitioners, 163 clients

Intervention

taking talking therapies outdoors, outdoor context for therapy, passive backdrop to therapy, actively incorporated through behavioural analysis, relationship building, metaphor, narrative therapy, role play, modelling, and stabilisation

Comparison

conventional indoor therapy

Outcome

reduced stress responses, improved mood, enriched therapy with added mutuality, freedom of expression, mind-body holism, interconnectedness with the natural world, and practitioner well-being

Abstract

P
I
C
O

Time spent in natural outdoor spaces has physiological and psychological benefits, such as reduced stress responses and improved mood. Mental health practitioners have begun to harness nature's restorative capacity by challenging convention and taking talking therapies outdoors. This review synthesises the experiences of these practitioners and their clients, with the aim of establishing a framework for best practice. A thematic synthesis was used to provide a systematic and integrative exploration of multiple therapy professions. Articles (N = 38, published from 1994 to 2019) comprised 322 practitioners and 163 clients. A mixed-method meta-synthesis resulted in a framework of higher and lower level themes. The outdoor context for therapy ranged in intensity from sitting or walking in urban parks and woodland to remote wilderness expeditions. The outdoors provided either a passive backdrop to therapy or was more actively incorporated through behavioural analysis, relationship building, metaphor, narrative therapy, role play, modelling, and stabilisation. Practical, therapeutic, and organisational issues were mitigated through assessment and formulation, informed consent, process contracting, enhancing predictability where possible, and awareness of professional competency. Therapy was subsequently enriched by added mutuality, freedom of expression, mind-body holism, interconnectedness with the natural world, and practitioner well-being. The question of whether therapy in natural spaces should become a more mainstream option for clients and practitioners is discussed.

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