What Is the Evidence to Support the Use of Therapeutic Gardens for the Elderly?
Read full paper →- Authors
- Mark B. Detweiler, Taral R. Sharma, Jonna G. Detweiler, Pamela F. Murphy, Sandra D. Lane, Jack Carman, Amara S. Chudhary, Mary H Halling, Kye Y. Kim
- Journal
- Psychiatry Investigation
- Year
- 2012
- Citations
- 179
TL;DR
This literature review suggests that therapeutic gardens and horticultural therapy may offer various benefits for the elderly, including reduced pain and stress, improved attention, and better sleep, but highlights a significant lack of rigorous, controlled clinical trials to definitively prove these effects, making self-experimentation an exploratory but potentially valuable endeavor.
What they tested
This paper is a literature review that synthesized existing English-language research on the use of therapeutic gardens and horticultural therapy for elderly populations. It explored various forms of interaction with nature, including:
**Therapeutic gardens:** Specially designed outdoor spaces within assisted living facilities, dementia residences, or rehabilitation centers, intended to promote exercise, sensory stimulation, positive reminiscences, and social interaction. These gardens often feature diverse plants for visual, olfactory, and tactile stimulation, walking paths, and protected seating areas.
**Horticultural therapy (HT):** Structured activities involving plants and gardening, used in therapeutic and rehabilitation settings. This can include indoor gardening or activities within a therapeutic garden.
**Exposure to natural settings:** This broadly includes passive interactions like having a window view of nature or listening to nature sounds, as well as direct engagement.
The review examined a range of potential benefits (outcome measures) reported in the literature, including:
**Psychological well-being:** Reduction in stress, modulation of agitation, improvement in attention, increased feelings of calm and relaxation, fostering a sense of accomplishment, improved self-esteem, and positive reminiscences.
**Physical health:** Reduction in pain perception, reduction in falls, improved ambulation (walking), and stabilization of sleep-wake cycles.
**Cognitive function:** Improvement in cognition and memory, and regaining lost skills.
**Behavioral outcomes:** Reduction in "as needed" medications (including antipsychotics), and improved social interaction.
**Healthcare utilization:** Shorter hospital stays.
The paper did not conduct new experiments but rather summarized findings from previous studies.
Who was studied
As a literature review, this paper did not involve a single study population. Instead, it synthesized findings from various studies that investigated the effects of therapeutic gardens and horticultural therapy on different groups of elderly individuals. The populations discussed in the reviewed literature included:
**Elderly individuals in general:** The overarching target group, often residing in assisted living or dementia residences.
**Dementia patients:** Individuals experiencing cognitive decline and agitation.
**Post-cholecystectomy patients:** Patients recovering from gallbladder surgery.
**Post-trauma and post-surgical patients:** Individuals undergoing rehabilitation after injuries or operations.
**Cardiac patients:** Individuals with heart conditions.
**Amputees:** Patients undergoing rehabilitation after limb loss.
**Post-stroke patients:** Individuals recovering from a stroke.
**Patients undergoing bronchoscopy:** Individuals undergoing a medical procedure involving the airways.
The settings for these studies varied, including hospitals, rehabilitation units, assisted living facilities, and dementia residences. The review noted a general lack of large, randomized controlled studies, implying that many of the studies included were smaller, descriptive, or case studies. Specific age ranges or health statuses for the participants in the individual reviewed studies were not consistently provided in this review, but the focus was exclusively on "the elderly."
How they measured it
This literature review did not employ specific instruments or scales itself, as it was a synthesis of existing research. However, it discussed various outcome measures that were reportedly used in the studies it reviewed. The methods of measurement, where mentioned, were generally broad and lacked specific instrument details in this review. Examples of how effects were reportedly measured in the reviewed literature include:
**Pain:** Assessed through patient self-report (e.g., "pain was significantly reduced") or indirectly by the amount of "high potency analgesics" required by patients.
**Anxiety:** Assessed through patient self-report (e.g., "anxiety was not significantly reduced").
**Medication use:** Quantified by tracking the reduction in "as needed" medications, including antipsychotics.
**Hospital stay duration:** Measured as the length of time patients remained in the hospital.
**Agitation, sleep, cognition, attention, stress, self-esteem, social interaction, ambulation, falls, reminiscences:** These were reported as outcomes that showed improvement or modulation, but the specific instruments (e.g., standardized scales, observational checklists, diaries) used to measure them in the original studies were not detailed in this review. For instance, "significant improvement in self-esteem in nine out of ten case studies" was mentioned, implying some form of self-esteem assessment.
The review highlighted that many of the studies were descriptive case studies, often without control patients, suggesting that objective, standardized measurement tools were not consistently or rigorously applied across all the literature it surveyed. The authors implicitly called for more "vigorous quantitative analysis" and "controlled clinical trials," indicating a current deficiency in precise, standardized measurement across the field.
Methodology
This paper is a **literature review**, not an original randomized controlled trial (RCT) as might be inferred from the "STUDY TYPE: Rct" tag provided in the prompt. The paper explicitly states its nature in the abstract: "This literature review presents the data supporting future studies..." and in the introduction: "We present some of the findings in the English literature that support initiating research in the effectiveness of horticultural therapy in garden settings for elderly individuals."
**How they ran the study (the review):**
The authors conducted a literature search to identify existing English-language studies on therapeutic gardens and horticultural therapy for the elderly. They then synthesized the findings from these studies, discussing historical context, current scientific understandings, and specific benefits reported in various contexts (e.g., pain reduction, attention improvement, stress modulation). The review aimed to identify trends, potential mechanisms, and, crucially, gaps in the existing evidence base.
**Why that design matters:**
A literature review serves to:
**Summarize existing knowledge:** It provides an overview of what has already been studied and found in a particular field.
**Identify patterns and themes:** It can highlight consistent findings across multiple studies,