'How growing a sunflower helped me fight anorexia'
'How growing a sunflower helped me fight anorexia' 1 day ago Share Save Malcolm Prior and Jenny Kumah BBC News rural affairs team Share Save Andy Alcroft/BBC Emily Hough is now using her experiences to help shape nature prescribing schemes For Emily Hough, nature was too often simply something "out there", a world apart from her, a view from a hospital window.
That was until five years ago, when a hospital occupational therapist gave her an unusual prescription: Grow a sunflower. "I'll be honest I'd never planted anything in my life," Ms Hough said. "But I planted that sunflower and, just watching it grow, from me watering it and from me protecting it from the shade, helped me feel connected for the first time and really be able to appreciate what was around me - and how I can make a difference to nature and what nature can actually do for me. "I was in a hospital at that point, so it was very limited. Fast forward five years, here we are today. "
It is supposed to complement other more mainstream treatments and therapies and has been a key part of the government's 10-year plan for the NHS in England.
She is now out of hospital and has become what the NHS calls an "Expert by Experience" (EbE) - someone who uses that experience to design and evaluate new health services. She helped shape the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB)'s flagship "nature prescription" scheme for the West Midlands, launched earlier this year. On Friday – World Mental Health Day - the scheme marks the training of its 100th health professional, with enough resources to support 1,000 patients accessing nature-based activities. Andy Alcroft/BBC Dom Higgins, from the Wildlife Trusts, saids the evidence in favour of green social prescribing was clear But the future of green social prescribing is uncertain.
Dom Higgins, head of health and education for The Wildlife Trusts, said: "It is unequivocal that nature improves mental health. "I think the time for questioning the evidence is really over and people within the system and the NHS and decision makers get this. "It's just we need the mechanism to make it available everywhere. It's time to seriously fund prevention and opportunities for people to create good health in the neighbourhoods where they live and work. " The national pilot scheme saw nearly 8,500 people prescribed nature activities in its first two years, with more than half those patients living in socio-economically deprived areas.
42 for every £1 invested.
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Raw_Score: 67.5
-
Factual Score: 35.0
Analysis: Partially supported claims
- Ai_Analysis:
- Final_Score: 67.5
- Analysis_Method:
- Fallacy_Penalty: -10.0
-
Reasoning Score: 42.5
Analysis: Strong reasoning