• Targeted green prescribing could save over £635 million per year
• Wildlife Trusts programmes help tackle anxiety, depression and social isolation
• “Nature is an essential part of health and social care” –The Wildlife Trusts
Nature-based health and wellbeing programmes could save hundreds of millions of pounds each year and reduce society’s reliance on the NHS, according to a new report by The Wildlife Trusts.
New analysis published today, A Natural Health Service: Improving Lives and Saving Money, found that green prescribing can save more in healthcare costs than the price of running a green prescribing scheme.
Green prescribing is an evidence-based pillar of social prescribing that harnesses the health, wellbeing, and social benefits of spending time in nature. It enables GPs and other health care practitioners to refer people to nature-based programmes to improve physical and mental health. The new research, undertaken by global strategic environmental and engineering consulting company, Ricardo plc, and The Institute of Occupational Medicine Health, analysed five Wildlife Trusts programmes to see how they benefitted the NHS. If just one of these programmes was offered to everyone likely to take them up–estimated at 1.2 million people–it could result in annual cost savings of £635.6 million.