Impacts of nature deprivations during the COVID-19 pandemic: A pre-post comparison
Agathe Colleony, Susan Clayton, Assaf Shwartz

TL;DR
This study examines how COVID-19 lockdowns reduced urban residents' nature interactions and negatively impacted their well-being, highlighting the importance of nature experiences for mental health during pandemics.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence from a longitudinal study on the effects of nature deprivation during COVID-19 lockdowns in a large city.
Findings
Nature interactions decreased during lockdown
Well-being declined more in less green neighborhoods
Affinity towards nature remained stable despite reduced experiences
Abstract
Nature provides a myriad of intangible and non-material services to people. However, urbanites are increasingly disconnected from the natural world. The consequences of this progressive disconnection from nature remain difficult to measure as this process is slow and long-term monitoring or large-scale manipulation on nature experiences are scarce. Measures to contain the spread of the recent covid-19 pandemic (i.e., lockdowns) have potentially reduced or even suppressed nature experiences in cities. This situation provided an opportunity for conducting a longitudinal study that can serve as a sort of natural experiment to quantify the effects of nature deprivation on individuals' health, well-being and relationship to nature. We collected data on these variables from the same individuals inhabiting a large metropolis (Tel Aviv, Israel) twice, in 2018 (before) and during the lockdown in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUrban Green Space and Health · Urban Agriculture and Sustainability · Land Use and Ecosystem Services
