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The Effect of Horticultural Therapy on Loneliness and Life Satisfaction in Elderly Adults Living in Nursing Home

The Effect of Horticultural Therapy on Loneliness and Life Satisfaction in Elderly Adults Living in Nursing Home

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT06311825
Enrollment
54
Registered
2024-03-15
Start date
2024-04-01
Completion date
2024-10-31
Last updated
2026-02-18

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Horticultural Therapy, Loneliness, Satisfaction, Personal, Aging

Keywords

Horticultural Therapy, Elderly, Loneliness, Life Satisfaction

Brief summary

Loneliness in elderly individuals increases with age and negatively affects individuals by decreasing life satisfaction. In recent years, horticultural therapy is a type of therapy that has developed and is added routine care of elderly individuals living in nursing homes. Social interaction, life satisfaction, feelings of success and responsibility and increase while loneliness and depression levels decrease through human-nature interaction in horticultural therapy. In our country, no study has been found on the effects of horticultural therapy on physical or mental health in elderly individuals. This research will be conducted as a randomized control group study to examine the effects of horticultural therapy on loneliness and life satisfaction in elderly individuals living in nursing homes.

Detailed description

In recent years, the elderly population is increasing in Turkey and around the world. In our country from 2002 to 2022, the number of elderly people receiving care increased 2.8 times. Elderly individuals frequently complain about loneliness and think that they are abandoned. Loneliness is a multidimensional concept consisting of emotional loneliness and social loneliness, and reported that it reduces life satisfaction in elderly individuals. There are many non pharmacological applications aimed at reducing loneliness and increasing life satisfaction however in recent years, the use of horticultural therapy in the world has attracted attention. In horticultural therapy interventions, gardening activities are carried out using indoor and outdoor plants. The plants which is medicinal and aromatic selected according to culture and cultivation. The plants contribute to the improvement of physical and mental health by stimulating 5 senses that visual, hearing, tasting, touching and smell. Horticultural therapy is important in terms of providing social activity, reducing loneliness and increasing life satisfaction in elderly individuals using the healing power of nature. Horticultural therapy is also used by nurses who are mental health professionals. In Turkey, there is no study to examine effects of horticultural therapy effects on mental health in elderly individuals. It is thought that with this study, it will be important to apply a new method in our country and contribute to nursing science in non-pharmacological applications.

Interventions

One week before horticultural therapy (HT) interventions, face-to-face interviews will be held with the individuals in the experimental group and the forms will be filled in as a pretest. HT will be applied to the experimental group. The application period was determined as a total of 6 weeks with 50-minute sessions twice a week. Before starting the HT sessions, area preparations will be made and a safe therapeutic garden will be established. Medicinal and aromatic plants will be selected that can grow in Turkey, are not harmful to human health, are fragrant and colorful in order to stimulate the senses, and according to air temperature and physical conditions. HT sessions will consist of gardening activities (group meeting, introduction of plants and cultivation). After HT interventions, the forms will be filled as a post test. The forms will be filled again 4 weeks after the end of the interventions for follow-up.

Sponsors

Istanbul University - Cerrahpasa
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE

Intervention model description

Two parallel groups randomized control study

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
60 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Over 60 years old, * Being literate, * Living in nursing home for at least 3 months, * Not diagnosed with dementia, * Mini Mental Test Score\>24 * No additional neurological disease, * No history of serious psychiatric illness, * Not in the acute phase of a systemic disease, * No vision or hearing loss that would hinder gardening activities, * Does not have a physical disability that would hinder gardening activities, * No history of falls, * Not participating in different applications at the same time.

Exclusion criteria

* Does not meet the inclusion criteria, * Persons with allergic reactions to soil and plants that may hinder with gardening activities.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Loneliness Scale for Elderly3 MonthThe scale measures the loneliness levels of the elderly and consists of 11 items. The scale consists of two sub-dimensions: social loneliness and emotional loneliness. In the scale, 5 items are coded directly (1, 4, 7, 8, 11), and 6 items are reverse coded (2, 3, 5, 6, 9, 10). The degree to which the person experiences the situation contained in each statement in the scale is determined by a 3-point Likert type rating (0 = yes, 1 = possible, 2 = no). The lowest score to be obtained from the scale is 0 and the highest score is 22. Higher scale scores indicate increased loneliness levels. The internal consistency Cronbach's alpha coefficient is α=is .85.
Life Satisfaction Scale3 MonthThe scale consists of 5 items and a single sub-dimension. The original scale is a seven-point Likert type, with answers ranging from 1-Strongly Agree to 7-Strongly Disagree. In the Turkish validity and reliability study conducted on adults, the seven-point Likert type was not found to be suitable for Turkish culture and the number of steps was reduced from seven to five. Scoring of the items in the scale; It was determined as "I totally disagree (1), I slightly agree (2), I moderately agree (3), I largely agree (4) and I totally agree (5)". The Cronbach Alpha internal consistency coefficient of the scale was reported as 0.88 and the test-retest reliability was reported as 0.97.

Countries

Turkey (Türkiye)

Contacts

STUDY_DIRECTORHülya Bilgin, PhD

Istanbul University - Cerrahpasa

STUDY_DIRECTORSima Pouya, PhD

Malatya Inonu University

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 19, 2026