(NAPSI)—When it comes to improving your health and happiness, research suggests that living near a park may be more important than you think.
What The Scientists Say
“Individuals who move to greener areas have significant and long-lasting improvements in mental health,” explained Dr. Ian Alcock of the University of Exeter Medical School.
Researchers from Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Brigham and Women’s Hospital found that women living in the greenest areas had a 12 percent lower death rate than women living in the least green areas.
Why Parks Are So Important
Research shows that high-quality parks make cities healthier in nearly every way.
- Proximity to parks makes it easier for you and your family to enjoy an active lifestyle, reducing risk for obesity, diabetes and other serious chronic health conditions.
- A park’s pleasant, relaxed environment is proven to reduce stress and improve mental health.
- Parks make it easy to meet your neighbors and create lasting friendships.
- Trees and other plants in parks help clean the air and teach kids about nature.
- Quality park systems can attract new employers and contribute to economic growth.
Technology For Creating Green Space
Considering all the ways parks boost well-being, you may be glad to learn there’s something you can do to get more parks built in your community.
Start by visiting ParkServe.tpl.org, a free online data platform created by the nonprofit The Trust for Public Land. The site gives people living in 14,000 cities across America the ability to measure local access to parks and to identify which neighborhoods need new parks most. You can even draw a potential park on the map and immediately see how the added green space would change park access and park equity measures for your city.
The organization believes that everyone deserves to have a quality park within a 10-minute walk (or a half mile) of home, and hundreds of leading U.S. mayors have endorsed that goal.
With data and custom reports that are easy to download, print and share, ParkServe can help you make the case for park investment to your elected officials.
How To Get It
Visit www.ParkServe.tpl.org today and put the “science of parks” to work for you!
““Individuals who move to greener areas have significant and long-lasting improvements in mental health,” said Dr. Ian Alcock of the University of Exeter Medical School. http://bit.ly/2w4sW36”