Abstract

This study aimed to investigate if proposed restorative attributes according to attention restoration theory and supportive environment theory could be experienced and identified in Icelandic landscape and contribute to a restorative experience in nature sites in rural Iceland. A prospective mixed-method study was conducted over the period of one year. Seven different nature sites that were considered likely to have restorative qualities were selected for the evaluation i.e., three forest sites, three seashores, and one park in and in the vicinity of Ísafjörður, Iceland. Each site was evaluated regarding how the participants experienced its restorative qualities and how a stay therein affected their mental state. Nature visits were offered once a week, where the participants visited one of the seven locations for two hours. The findings show that the participants perceived and experienced nature sites as having the characteristics of a restorative environment and that staying at the nature sites positively affected their mental state. External conditions, like weather, which can affect nature visits, were rarely a hinderance. Thus, it can be concluded that numerous coastal areas, forests, and parks in Iceland, especially in rural areas, might possess restorative qualities as well. This result shows that wild and open nature in North West Iceland has the characteristics of a restorative environment and can be utilized for health promotion.

Highlights

  • There is growing evidence that both passive and active exposure to nature can have a positive impact on human health [1,2,3]

  • The findings show that the different types of nature sites evaluated in this study had characteristics of a restorative environment according to attention restoration theory and supportive environment theory

  • The results show that staying at the nature sites had a positive effect on the participants’ mental states

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Summary

Introduction

There is growing evidence that both passive and active exposure to nature can have a positive impact on human health [1,2,3]. The methods of the biomedical model, which had prevailed until the end of the twentieth century, have been successful in the treatment of infectious diseases and many physical ailments. These are not useful in preventing diseases that appear as consequences of e.g., stressful and sedentary lifestyles [4]. People’s views began to focus on factors that could contribute to their health, and the concept of salutogenesis emerged The creator of this concept, Aaron Antonovsky [8], believed that instead of focusing on pathogens and risk factors, it is necessary to look more at the factors that could contribute to improved health and well-being, both in the individual and the environment. Nature is one of the factors that is considered to be salutogenic and can promote

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