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Walk in the Park Improves ADHD (page 2)

By Debra Levey Larson
Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Sciences University of Illinois

The sample size was relatively small –17 children – mostly because the logistics were a nightmare to coordinate. “Because we kept everything the same, the children all went to the same park and walked through the same neighborhood and downtown area. The testing location had to be close by so that there wasn’t a lot of lag time between going for the walk and taking the post-test,” said Faber Taylor. “And each child was always paired with the same adult guide for their walks, and all the children were tested by the same tester.”

Kuo said that the variables of the study were very hard to control. “We started with a much larger sample size.  But when we threw out all of the things that could go wrong – the weather wasn’t good one day, the child came late, or came medicated—when we threw out all of those, it left us with this relatively pure, clean sample to work with.”

Faber Taylor added that their confidence in the findings from this study is bolstered by findings from other studies. “Because we have results from a national study which looked at over 450 children, we can have more confidence that this relationship between natural settings and improved attention is true not just for the children in this study.” She said that the larger study included children from all over the United States, representing a wide range of ages, different community sizes, and both with and without hyperactivity. “The findings from the national study give us some confidence that this relationship applies to all children with ADHD.”

Kuo emphasized that this study involved an objective test of attention, not just on children’s or parents’ impressions. 

During the walks, all of the children were unmedicated -- those of the participants who normally took medications to control their ADHD symptoms stayed off their medications on the days of the walks.  Interestingly, Faber Taylor and Kuo found that a “dose of nature” may be as helpful -- at least for a while -- as a dose of stimulants.  “We calculated the size of the effect in our study and compared it to the size of effects in a recent medication study,” said Faber Taylor, “and we were surprised to see that the dose of nature had effects the same size or even larger than the dose of medication.”  What remains to be seen is how long the effects of a dose of nature last. 

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