I read an interesting article in the Independent newspaper
this week by Kitty Knowles. In it she
said that Gardening, once perceived as the sole preserve of middle-class women
who venerate the Chelsea Flower Show, is now being used as an effective therapy
to help drug addicts, soldiers with post-traumatic disorders and stroke victims
alike.
On the eve of National Gardening Week, Kitty
reported that Sir Richard Thompson, president of the Royal College of
Physicians, has said that more doctors should be promoting gardening therapy,
not simply to benefit patients, but also to create "huge potential savings
for the NHS". "Just looking at a garden is scientifically proven to
improve recovery time," said Alyson Chorley the patron of horticultural
charity, Thrive: "Patients do much better after surgery if they look at
'green things' – and they get out of hospital quicker."
According to Sir Richard, "positive
spin-offs" from gardening include, exercise, vitamin D from sunlight, and
home-grown food. He said: "If everyone was encouraged to do a bit more
gardening, you can well imagine how that would affect obesity rates and reduce
the stress on the NHS."
According to Thrive, gardening can benefit
everyone, regardless of age or ability. It can help older people, and people
who have had strokes to improve their mobility by getting their muscles moving.
Gardening also improves mental health by providing a sense of purpose and
achievement. It's a very social activity and can reduce feelings of isolation
and low mood – making friends is easy for some, but for others it is really
difficult and having a shared interest can really help to break the ice.
The charity combines therapeutic benefits with
practical ones by teaching City & Guilds qualifications, with more than
half of those taking part leaving with an NVQ in work-based horticulture.
Kitty Knowles reported that Ian Rickman attended
The Geoffrey Udall Centre in Reading, after suffering a stroke in 1995. The 58-year-old centre volunteer said,
"Initially, I didn't think I'd ever be able to garden again. When I came
out of hospital I looked through my patio doors at my greenhouse and I just
cried. I couldn't even step over the threshold. But with time, and through the
gardening, my confidence returned. It was like being born again."
Forty-nine-year-old Kevin Fitzgerald turned to the
east London-based Grounded project 10 years ago when he was struggling with
depression and alcohol-addiction. "I just didn't know what to do
anymore," Fitzgerald said. "But when I started volunteering, I felt
this surge of wellbeing at the possibility of being able to come to a patch in
the park and call it my own. To hit the cow parsley and take out the brambles
just allowed me to find a sense of new direction."
So for those of us contemplating tackling our
gardens for the first time this year, at least we can be comforted by the
knowledge that the whole experience will be doing us, as well as the garden,
the world of good!
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Amanda Thomas
UK Health Radio
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