Ben Packard – UW News /news Wed, 24 Oct 2018 16:41:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 A dose of nature: New UW initiative to spearhead research on health benefits of time outside /news/2018/10/24/nature-for-health/ Wed, 24 Oct 2018 16:36:43 +0000 /news/?p=59506
Time spent in nature can reduce anxiety and help you sleep better at night, experts have found. It also offers promising benefits for a range of health issues, including cardiovascular disease, depression and obesity.

But there are still many questions about how time in nature can help with these health conditions, and others. A new 天美影视传媒 initiative announced this week seeks to advance research on these questions, connecting academic researchers with pediatricians, childcare providers, mental health practitioners and others who work with various populations on critical health issues.

“The initiative is aimed at accelerating our understanding of the health impacts of time spent in nature,” said , the initiative’s lead and a UW professor in the School of Environmental and Forest Sciences. “The group is not only about doing this critical research, but also about applying it to create programs and policies that are good for human health.”

Seattle-based REI Co-op $1 million to help launch the initiative at the UW. The new endeavor is part of , a university-wide institute that seeks to connect scholars with community partners to address our most difficult environmental challenges.

“The best researchers in the world are proving the case that getting outside is critical to our mental and our physical well-being,” said REI CEO Jerry Stritzke. “It’s time to rethink time outdoors as a must-have, not a nice-to-have.”

Related:聽Former Interior Secretary Sally Jewell brings leadership to UW community, new EarthLab initiative

Nature for Health will focus its efforts on research that examines nature’s effects on health across five populations: veterans, children, older adults, health care providers and underserved populations. Researchers from across academic disciplines will partner with experts outside the university to conduct studies and projects that are most pressing to these key groups.

For example, , a UW assistant professor of environmental and forest sciences, is working with veterans groups to look at the effect of outdoor activities on treating symptoms of PTSD and depression. , a UW assistant professor of pediatrics and a pediatrician at Seattle Children’s Research Institute, is working with outdoor preschools to better understand the benefits of kids spending time outside.

“Some of the conditions that nature can help improve are fairly widespread and are expensive to treat, whether that’s depression, mental illnesses or physical illnesses,” Lawler said. “We know there are benefits from nature, but we need to know more about those benefits to produce better treatment.”

About two and a half years ago, Lawler and UW public health professor emeritus convened a small group of professors and community members with expertise in the outdoors industry, pediatric health and environmental nonprofits to talk about the health benefits of nature. That group quickly expanded to a network of more than 120 people with interest and expertise in many facets of nature and health, including outdoor preschool directors and teachers, psychologists, outdoor therapists, and planners from city, county and state offices.

Members of the group published a last year that summarized existing research on the health impacts of time spent in nature. This paper served as the backbone for the formation of the new Nature for Health initiative, leaders said.

“We are bringing UW expertise to bear on real issues that practitioners are grappling with. This will be multidisciplinary, applied research in partnership with others outside the university,” said , executive director of EarthLab. “Access to nature is also an issue of equity and justice which are core to EarthLab鈥檚 work. There are decisions made every day about access to nature and this initiative gives us a platform to connect more people across campus, and connect more decision-makers and users of this information on this issue. It has the potential to bring us together like few others.”

EarthLab鈥檚 Nature for Health will partner with the 鈥 a national group that is working to increase equitable access to nature though advocacy and programs 鈥 to collectively advance the evidence base for nature鈥檚 role in human health and well-being.

The new initiative will kick off with a daylong today at w菨色菨b蕯altx史 鈥 Intellectual House on the UW campus. This evening, Richard Louv, author of “Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder,” will deliver the second-annual at Benaroya Hall in Seattle. Both events are hosted by EarthLab and co-sponsored by REI.

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For more information, contact Lawler at jlawler@uw.edu and Packard at bwpack@uw.edu.

 

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Former Interior Secretary Sally Jewell brings leadership to UW community, new EarthLab initiative /news/2018/10/02/earthlab/ Tue, 02 Oct 2018 20:28:32 +0000 /news/?p=59107
Sally Jewell has walked the halls of the White House and cared for a fifth of all U.S. land. She has practiced diplomacy at boardroom tables and leadership at one of the nation’s most successful outdoor retail companies. She has climbed Mount Rainier seven times.

Now, Jewell brings a lifetime of experience in business, nonprofits, government and the outdoors to the 天美影视传媒, where one of her tasks is to help shape the future of , a new university-wide institute that seeks to connect scholars with community partners to solve our most difficult environmental problems.

Sally Jewell

, U.S. Secretary of the Interior under President Barack Obama and former CEO of REI, has returned to her alma mater to work as a distinguished fellow with the College of the Environment and to serve in a volunteer capacity as chair of the advisory council for EarthLab.

As a fellow with the College of the Environment, she will guest lecture with various units across campus, mentor students and collaborate with faculty and staff. In her capacity as chair of EarthLab’s advisory council, she will develop a team of advisors composed entirely of people outside the university with varied backgrounds and expertise that will provide strategic guidance, support and direction for EarthLab.

“By coming to the university, I’m trying to help students understand how you can create a future that’s both economically successful and environmentally sustainable 鈥 one that you are proud to leave to future generations,” said Jewell, who received her bachelor’s degree in mechanical engineering at the UW and served on the Board of Regents for 12 years. “EarthLab is addressing that by working outside the university to identify and raise support for solving big challenges, especially those in the environment, then bringing together multidisciplinary teams from across the university to help.”

Ben Packard

In addition to the outside advisory council, whose members Jewell will name by the end of 2018, EarthLab is supported by a leadership board of deans and a steering committee made up of faculty and academic leaders across all three campuses and disciplines. This broad leadership translates to the variety of projects EarthLab will tackle 鈥 projects that will require multidisciplinary teams.

“Think of EarthLab as a bridge that connects our diverse scholarship with people who can use it to make better decisions about the significant environmental challenges we’re facing,” said , EarthLab’s executive director. “We couldn’t ask for a better person than Sally Jewell to help us launch this advisory council. She’s full of passion for the university to be more engaged in these big challenges, and she knows from her experiences how to navigate across sectors.”

While the EarthLab concept has been percolating at the UW for nearly a decade, in the past year the idea has coalesced into a tangible organization led by Packard, who previously worked at The Nature Conservancy and Starbucks. At its core, EarthLab will connect researchers at the UW with decision-makers to develop actionable solutions to the most pressing environmental challenges.

What makes this different from previous collaborations is an intentional push to establish long-term, working relationships between scholars and outside organizations to address messy, complex issues that won’t be solved with the publication of one paper, or the funding of one project.

That might involve partnering with a city to find environmentally sustainable ways to build affordable housing, or working with shellfish growers to lessen the impact of ocean acidification on their businesses, or advising a municipal agency on how to deal with contaminated stormwater runoff.

Lisa Graumlich

“This is really about deep involvement, thinking locally and globally, and bringing people who have never been at the table before into a partnership where the UW is just one of the entities. For me as an academic, it’s a really different way of thinking about our role,” said College of the Environment Dean and Mary Laird Wood Professor , who was the college’s founding dean in 2010 and has envisioned a program such as EarthLab from the start.

Similar programs exist at a handful of universities across the U.S., including Arizona State University, Columbia University, Stanford University, the University of Minnesota and the University of Vermont. These various institutes also work at the boundary of university scholarship and society, putting science into action and engaging in ongoing research with decision-makers from all sectors.

“Many people outside the university describe UW as a building with no doors. There are a lot of windows and they can see something is going on, but they don’t know how to get in,” Packard said. “The university’s mission to serve society will be met if we’re more accessible and engaged, listening more and adjusting to serve society’s needs without compromising the integrity of our independent scholarship.”

The UW’s and are two existing organizations that are members of EarthLab. Both have track records of working with local communities and municipalities to address relevant issues related to climate change. For example, researchers with the Climate Impacts Group and Washington Sea Grant recently that offered the clearest picture yet of sea level rise at more than 150 coastal sites in Washington. These localized projections will help coastal communities better plan infrastructure projects and evacuation routes, among other things.

Because these kinds of projects can cross many academic fields, EarthLab will be a home for multidisciplinary, applied research, and will provide administrative support and services for “nontraditional” grants that could fund an applied research project that addresses an environmental problem in society.

An EarthLab grants program will begin in early 2019, geared toward faculty who are working on “first mile” or “last mile” problems 鈥 either beginning a project that involves engaging community partners, or finding ways to make completed research relevant to communities. One goal is to involve students who want to work on interdisciplinary research teams.

“Students almost universally want this,” said Jewell, referencing her conversations with students at the UW and at Harvard during a recent fellowship. “They want to have an experience here, and in their work with professors, that has applicability when they leave. We have the chance to do this here through EarthLab. I think there will be many opportunities for students to work on real-life issues.”

Another long-term goal of EarthLab is to reward faculty who are working on multidisciplinary, applied research that addresses current societal problems. Most units across campus award tenure and career advancement in a way that encourages researchers to focus narrowly and maximize their number of publications, Packard said.

EarthLab’s leaders realize the scale of such a change.

“What we’re talking about is nothing short of how the UW shows up in the 21st century,” Packard said. “If we’re going to invest in this and support our faculty and students to engage in this way, then we will fundamentally change the way the university shows up.”

EarthLab received foundational support from the Bullitt Foundation, the Stolte Family Foundation and several individuals.

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For more information, contact Packard at bwpack@uw.edu or 206-616-0357.

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