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New statewide health and nature collaboration aims to get Texans outdoors for their health’s sake

Center for Health and Nature is studying the wide-ranging health benefits of spending time in nature and encourages Texans to get outdoors
parents and their three young children dressed in Texas A&M fan gear spend time in nature at Aggie Park

The desire to be outdoors increased during the COVID-19 pandemic as people who wanted to leave their homes looked for a space to practice safe social distancing. Yet as the pandemic has waned, researchers increasingly are finding that there are real and long-term health benefits from regularly being outdoors.

These health benefits include improved immune function and mood, as well as lowered cortisol levels and blood pressure levels, according to Regents Professor Jay Maddock, PhD, from Texas A&M University School of Public Health.

Now Maddock and the Center for Health and Nature—a collaboration between Texas A&M Health, Houston Methodist, and Texan by Nature—have received a grant from the REI Cooperative Action Fund, which support groups that promote getting out in nature and provides seed money to encourage scientific research.

The center will use the funds to create a statewide health and nature collaboration to connect researchers, practitioners, landowners and conservationists during the next two years. These funds will extend the center’s efforts to study the healing power of nature and encourage people to get outdoors.

“Our goal is to have people recognize the benefits of nature. If we look at public health, we have statements encouraging people to be physically active and eat a healthy diet and to not smoke,” Maddock said. “We’d like to get ‘be outside in nature’ included in that list. When people think of living a healthy life, we want them to think of that connection to nature, and it’s available to all people, regardless of race, ethnicity and income.”

Studying nature’s health benefits

The Center for Health and Nature, which was founded in 2018, is the only center in the nation that brings together a hospital, a university and a conservation group to investigate how connecting with nature supports human health and well-being.

“We’re able to look at patient care and how we improve nature access in patient care,” Maddock said. “We’re also able to look through the conservation lens and through a unique Texas lens because of Texan by Nature, which was founded by First Lady Laura Bush. Texan by Nature has a very different angle than you see in most nature centers; it really is one that fits Texas and is appropriate for our state and all the residents of the state.”

More than 30 faculty fellows from across the nation are involved in the center’s work. Approximately 20 of the fellows are from Texas, with most representing Houston Methodist or Texas A&M’s School of Public Health, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, and School of Architecture. Maddock hopes the REI funds will entice faculty from other Texas colleges and universities to participate in the center’s work.

Texas A&M also is one of the founding partners of the National Nature and Health Alliance, which started in December 2022. The other founding partners of the alliance, which is also funded by REI Cooperative Action Fund, include the University of Washington, the University of Maryland, and the University of Utah.

Connecting Texans and nature

In addition to its research component, the Center for Health and Nature is developing innovative efforts to encourage Texans across the state to get outdoors. For example, a faculty fellow is developing an extension-based program in partnership with Texas A&M AgriLife Extension that encourages families in both rural and urban areas to explore nature. When completed, this program will be delivered through AgriLife Extension agents in all of Texas’ 254 counties.

These types of programs could have significant health benefits for all Texans. For example, researchers have found that being outdoors offers a number of benefits for children, Including reduced ADHD symptoms, enhanced attention span, and increased motor skills.

And the benefits add up the longer people remain in nature. “There’s this long-term effect of being in nature,” Maddock said. “If people spend a long weekend fully immersed in nature, then we see changes in immune function—and the improved immune function can actually fight off cancer, which is amazing. Your natural killer cells increase a month later from spending a weekend in nature.”

Media contact: media@tamu.edu

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