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Green Walls in Offices Have a Positive Impact on Skin and Immune Health

on June 1, 2022 at 2:57 pm under , , ,
Photo: Aki Sinkkonen / Luonnonvarakeskus

It is estimated that one out of five people living in the developed countries suffers from autoimmune disorders, such as allergies, atopy, type 1 diabetes and inflammatory bowel diseases. The resulting costs for society are estimated at more than a hundred billion euros per year.

“The results indicate that we can support people’s health with relatively easy nature-based solutions. However, urban societies need, in addition to these types of solutions, broader societal changes to maintain and increase healthy and useful contact with nature”
Marja Roslund
Research Scientist at Luke

A recent study shows that green walls (living walls) installed inside offices diversify employees’ skin microbiota. Diverse skin microbiota has been inversely associated with atopy in earlier studies. “Based on our results, green walls offer ideal solutions in workplaces and other indoor areas to balance people’s regular microbiota. Even though it is often necessary to medically treat autoimmune disorders, it would be important to enhance the prevention of these disorders and alleviate symptoms through contact with nature. This is the first study in which the addition of plants indoors is shown to be linked not only to microbiota, but also to immune regulation,” says Laura Soininen, a doctoral researcher at the University of Helsinki, commenting on the study published in Scientific Reports.

Solutions are needed to maintain contact with nature

Nature’s diverse microbes help the immune system develop and operate normally. In urban societies, people are less in contact with nature, which is why we need innovative nature-based solutions to maintain nature contact and reduce autoimmune disorders. “The results indicate that we can support people’s health with relatively easy nature-based solutions. However, urban societies need, in addition to these types of solutions, broader societal changes to maintain and increase healthy and useful contact with nature,” says Marja Roslund, research scientist at Luke. “These results encourage us to investigate this further.”

The study was conducted in the Business Finland-funded ADELE 2 (Immune Defence and Living Environment) project between Luke, the University of Helsinki and the University of Tampere. The research group of Heikki Hyöty, Professor of Virology, participated in the study from the University of Tampere, and the study is part of the doctoral thesis of Laura Soininen, master of science in ecology (University of Helsinki).


Read more: Green walls inside offices have a positive impact on commensal skin microbiota and enhance immune regulation

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