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Walk in the Park Improves ADHD (page 4)

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

“Some of the previous survey research suggests a relationship between children who regularly play in green spaces and how severe their symptoms are. Children who have regular exposure to green spaces have milder symptoms overall. So that’s hinting that there may be a persistent effect,” said Kuo. 

She said that while there are hints that the regular doses of nature work long term – that you can expose a child to the same green outdoor settings day after day and still get a benefit – the science isn’t advanced enough to give parents a strict formula. “We can’t say for sure, ‘two hours of outdoor play will get you this many days of good behavior,’ but we can say it’s worth trying, and we can say that as little as 20 minutes of outdoor exposure could potentially buy you an afternoon or a couple of hours to get homework done,” said Kuo. “One reason we believe this is that if the effect were short-lived, we don’t think that parents would have so consistently observed it. But they do. They report it over and over. And they report it independently. So, in the larger study with over 450 kids, we asked ‘what’s your kid like after watching TV or after playing outside’ and none of the parents know what any of the other parents are telling us, but they overwhelmingly agree.”

Faber Taylor believes it would be easy to add a dose of nature to a child’s routine. “I could imagine parents hearing about this research and immediately applying it – just trying it out – taking their child to the park either when their child’s symptoms are exacerbated or as a regular routine.

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