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Get Back to Nature

Spending time outside really is good for your mind and body.

August 26, 2025

For a lot of us, being outside is a refreshing break from time indoors at school or work. Happily, studies show that spending time in nature has multiple health benefits. Learn how even a few minutes outdoors can improve your outlook.

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Hiking for the Win

Studies have found that hiking in nature is a powerful health practice, affecting heart health, cognitive acuity, mood, creativity and relationships. It's common knowledge that walking is good for your physical and mental health. If you're able, you can challenge yourself with a tougher trail. But you'll also reap health benefits with a slower pace — and a nice view never hurts.

Taking It Easy

You don’t need to exercise in nature for a positive impact on your health. Just being in nature, living near it or even viewing pictures of it can be beneficial. Spending time in nature triggers positive emotions and calms the nervous system, creating the mental capacity to cultivate more creativity, gratitude, resilience and connection.

Researchers have found reduced stress levels in people living near large areas of green space. In another, viewing nature from a window, on a walk or in pictures and videos led to reduced stress, easier recovery from illness, better physical well-being in elderly people, and behavioral changes that improve mood and general well-being.

How much is enough?

According to a study published in Scientific Reports, people who spend two hours or more outdoors during the week reported being in better mental and physical health than those who didn’t go out at all. The benefits were the same across age and socioeconomic groups and it didn’t matter if the experience was in a local park or open wilderness.

Many health practitioners have responded to these findings by prescribing time in nature (with or without exercise) to improve their patients’ mental and physical health, as well as their overall life expectancy. As a tool to help lower stress, decrease blood pressure, and reduce the risk of asthma, allergies, diabetes and heart disease, being in nature is a low-cost, low-risk choice for healthcare providers.

Your #1 Healthcare Advocate

Whether you’re not feeling well or want advice, you can call your primary care provider.

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