A 6 Month study of the health effects of flowers on Senior citizens
Everyday,
our aging population faces the challenges of growing older, including
depression, memory loss and social withdrawal. As a concerned nation, we
are continually exploring new means to ease daily-life anxieties.
Recently, researchers at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey in
the USA released the results of a six-month behavioral study on the
health effects of flowers on senior citizens. The study demonstrates
that flowers ease depression, inspire social networking and refresh
memory as we age.??"The results are significant because as our nation
grows older and life becomes more stressful, we look for easy and
natural ways to enhance our lives - and the lives of our aging parents,"
said Dr. Jeannette Haviland-Jones, professor of psychology and director
of the Human Development Lab at Rutgers. "Now, one simple answer is
right under our noses."??This research follows a study conducted in
2000, which links flowers to greater happiness and life satisfaction in
women. In 2001, Rutgers set out to explore the effects flowers would
have on senior citizens, who experience different living situations and
greater life changes.
Prevention in a Bud, Not a Bottle
More than
100 seniors participated in the Rutgers research study, in which some
received flowers and others did not. The results shed new light on how
nature's support systems help seniors cope with the challenges of aging.
The results are as follows: 1. Flowers Decrease Depression. Study
participants showed a significant increase in happiness and positive
moods when flowers were present. 2. Flowers Refresh Recent Memory.
Seniors performed higher on everyday memory tasks and experienced
enriched personal memories in the presence of flowers. 3. Flowers
Encourage Companionship. Seniors who received flowers re-engaged with
members of their communities and enlarged their social contacts to
include more neighbors, religious support and even medical personnel. "Instinct
tells us that flowers lift our spirits, but, their effects on seniors
are especially profound, if not surprising," said Haviland-Jones.
New Evidence Sprouts Up
Specifically,
81 percent of seniors who participated in the study reported a
reduction in depression following the receipt of flowers. Forty percent
of seniors reported broadening their social contacts beyond their normal
social circle of family and close friends. And, 72 percent of the
seniors who received flowers scored very high on memory tests in
comparison with seniors who did not receive flowers.??"Happier people
live longer, healthier lives and are more open to change," said
Haviland-Jones. "Our research shows that a small dose of nature, like
flowers, can do a world of wonder for our well-being as we age."