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Forget pills, more doctors ought prescribe nature, fruits, and vegetables.
Forget pills, more doctors ought prescribe nature, fruits, and vegetables. (Photo: Alexy Klementiev/Stocksy)

Hey Congress, Here鈥檚 Our Health Plan

Let鈥檚 reduce health care costs by getting outdoors, eating better, and pushing for progressive legislation

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Forget pills, more doctors ought prescribe nature, fruits, and vegetables.
(Photo: Alexy Klementiev/Stocksy)

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On Thursday the House of Representatives and replace it with a program that, among other things, cuts Medicaid and will likely make it harder for people with pre-existing medical conditions to get coverage for the care they need, setting up a showdown in the Senate that is sure to be contentious. Throughout the process, Congress has ignored one key part of the healthcare reality:living right makes us healthier and lowers the need for expensive medical care. That's not to say a听healthy lifestyle will or should听replace insurance coverage, but the road to听lower costs and increased wellness starts with eating better, getting more exercise, and being outside more often.听

Prescribe Nature

Even first lady Melania Trump is on board with this non-partisan ideal. In March, she made some remarks on health care upon an official visit to Children鈥檚 Hospital in Washington, D.C. After visiting with a half dozen of the young patients, the with a quote from the First Lady that read: 鈥淚 am a passionate believer in integrating and interpreting nature鈥檚 elements into our daily lives to create a warm, nurturing, and positive environment. I believe that these same natural benefits can be instrumental to enhancing the health and well-being of all children.鈥

More than a few people noted the irony of the First Lady discussing children鈥檚 health care on the eve of the GOP's attempt to repeal the Affordable Care Act, which is . 鈥淵ou know what else can contribute to the healing process?鈥 . 鈥淎ffordable access to health care and medicine. Looking at trees is nice too, I guess.鈥

鈥淚t was like Marie Antoinette, but saying, 鈥楲et them eat nature,鈥欌 says Richard Louv, author of Vitamin N, and Last Child in the Woods, in which听he coined the term, 鈥渘ature deficit disorder.鈥 But the first lady is on the right track, Louv says. 鈥淭here are more than 500 studies that correlate being outdoors improved health.鈥 Just being outside, even without factoring in exercise, has been shown to reduce obesity, lower blood pressure, reduce diabetes, improve asthma, and reduce the symptoms of ADHD and PTSD, amongst other things.

Dr. Robert Zarr, a D.C.-based pediatrician, . He is the founder of , a program that helps physicians prescribe time outdoors to children in order to prevent and improve a host of ailments. 鈥淚 see this as no different from prescribing medicine for asthma or an ear infection,鈥 says Zarr. People take advice from medical professionals more seriously when it鈥檚 written on a script pad, he says. Physicians can type the patient鈥檚 zip code into the ParksRx database to bring up a tailored map of nearby parks and their amenities, which lets the provider prescribe specific outdoor places and activities. Since 2013, physicians affiliated with the program have written more than 3,000 prescriptions for people in 24 states to get outdoors. Already Zarr is finding that if a child is prescribed a visit to a park, he or she will spend 22 more minutes a week physically active.

鈥淓ighty percent of health care expenditure is for chronic diseases,鈥 like high blood pressure, hypertension, and asthma, Zarr says. Reduce those diseases, and the cost of healthcare comes down.

Prioritize Good Food Over Medicine

Eating more healthfully may be just as important for health as being outdoors and exercising. is an organization that recruits physicians to write prescriptions for eating fruits and vegetables under the听same philosophy as听Dr. Zarr鈥檚 park prescription program鈥攖hat a direct order on a script pad carries more weight than a physician giving verbal advice. Along with the doctor鈥檚 orders, individuals in the FVRx (Fruit and Vegetable Rx) program receive vouchers worth $4 per day that can be redeemed for fresh produce at Target and various farmer鈥檚 markets. They also receive nutrition counseling.

Results of the prescription and voucher program are already strong: since 2011, more than 8,500 people in ten states and the Navajo nation have enrolled in the program, and 55 percent of them have shown a significant drop in their body mass index within 16 weeks. Eating better, researchers find, also encourages people to get out and exercise more.

鈥淗ow about instead of kicking people off health care, we prevent them getting sick in the first place,鈥 says Wholesome Wave founder Michel Nischan. The Republicans鈥 plan from the rolls of Medicaid and 24 million people from their current insurance plans,听according to the Congressional Budget Office. 鈥淭he $72,000 annual cost for one person's dialysis would afford 197 people two servings of fruits and vegetables every day for a year.鈥

Rethink听Insurance

Should people who spend more time outdoors pay less for their health insurance? Such programs already exist in the life insurance market. A company called helps broker policies with better terms for those who are more active. Why not do similar things for basic health insurance? Is there space in a healthcare bill for such an effort?

鈥淲e can allocate funds to educating health care providers on how to integrate the outdoors into their lives,鈥 says Dr. Peter Angood, President of the American Association for Physician Leadership, as well as a fellow at the Explorer鈥檚 Club. We can also fund more studies, like the ones being conducted by Dr. Zarr or听by the Sierra Club鈥檚 Great Outdoor Lab, studying the health effects of rafting trips on underserved youth and military veterans in the hopes of getting health insurance companies to fund time outside. Of course, we have to increase access to the outdoors as well, for people in the urban and suburban environments where most people receive medical care these days, says Angood. 鈥淭hat requires pressure on your elected officials to make more parks and green spaces and increase access to public lands in general.鈥

According to Florence Williams, author of The Nature Fix, taking advantage of nature for health benefits is ultimately down to all of us individually. 鈥淗owever this health care process shakes out, it鈥檚 going to disappoint a lot of people,鈥 she says. 鈥淕o outside and take care of yourself. The government isn鈥檛 going to save you.鈥

Corrections: (04/28/2025) A previous version of this article misspelled the title of Richard Louv's book, Last Child in the Woods. 国产吃瓜黑料 regrets the error.
Lead Photo: Alexy Klementiev/Stocksy

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