Updated
Updated · NPR · May 11
Susan Abookire Leads 11 Doctors in Forest Therapy to Push Nature-Based Medical Training
Updated
Updated · NPR · May 11

Susan Abookire Leads 11 Doctors in Forest Therapy to Push Nature-Based Medical Training

1 articles · Updated · NPR · May 11
  • Eleven doctors and medical students left a Boston hospital for a two-hour forest therapy session in Arnold Arboretum led by Dr. Susan Abookire, a physician and certified guide.
  • Abookire says medical training rarely includes nature-based medicine, even though hundreds of studies link time in nature to lower anxiety and gains in immunity, sleep, cardiovascular health and brain function.
  • The session used structured exercises—watching movement, exploring textures and guided reflection—to help stressed clinicians step away from charts, monitors and ambulance sirens.
  • Abookire, after more than 20 years in hospital leadership, wants participants to become ambassadors who bring forest therapy to colleagues and patients.
  • She is among only a handful of U.S. doctors adding forest bathing to medical education, framing it as a complement to high-tech care rather than an alternative.
As nature becomes medicine, how can hospitals integrate this therapy without easy access to a forest?
Is forest therapy a cure for physician burnout or a band-aid on a broken healthcare system?