Method Article

The Pathways and Efficacy of Horticultural Therapy in Promoting College Students' Mental Health: An Explanatory Sequential Mixed-methods Study

DOI:

10.3791/69962

January 16th, 2026

In This Article

Summary

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

This article analyzes the use of horticultural therapy as a natural intervention to enhance the mental health of college students. The strategy, which uses a mixed-methods methodology and is based on an environment-cognition-emotion-behavior pathway model, improves life satisfaction, affect balance, and sense of life purpose.

Abstract

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

With increasing societal competition, mental health issues among college students have become increasingly prominent, while traditional mental health education often suffers from limited formats and effectiveness. This study investigates the mechanisms and effectiveness of horticultural therapy (HT), a nature-based intervention, in improving college students' mental health using a sequential mixed-methods explanatory design. In the quantitative phase, 112 college students were randomly assigned to an experimental group receiving HT intervention or a control group, with the experimental group participating in eight weekly HT sessions (90 min each) involving activities such as flower arrangement and herbal tea tasting. Intervention effects were assessed using standardized psychological scales and facial expression video analysis. In the qualitative phase, textual data reflecting participants' authentic experiences were collected and analyzed using grounded theory with NVivo 12. Results showed that, compared with the control group, the experimental group demonstrated significantly higher post-intervention scores in meaning in life (p = 0.017), overall affect index (p = 0.044), and life satisfaction (p = 0.046). Within the experimental group, post-intervention levels of meaning in life (p = 0.02), affect balance (p = 0.007), and positive affect (p = 0.019) were significantly higher than pre-intervention values. Facial expression analysis revealed notable differences in the distribution of seven expressions between groups, with positive expressions increasing over time, particularly during flower arranging and tea tasting activities. Qualitative analysis further identified a four-layer pathway model (Environment → Cognition → Emotion → Behavior), explaining 36%, 32%, 16%, and 15% of the variance, respectively. Overall, horticultural therapy effectively enhances college students' life satisfaction, sense of life meaning, and affect balance, thereby improving mental health through a multi-layered psychological pathway.

Introduction

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

China has experienced success in reforming its health sector. The population's health continues to progress toward higher levels. However, all of this continual process of changing with technology and industrialization, combined with the changing condition of the environment, and the current lifestyle of Chinese society, has created different issues related to subjective well-being and mental health (MH) of individuals. One of the most significant challenges being faced is that college students are facing enormous amounts of psychological stress, interpersonal conflict, and emotional strain due to the rapid speed of change in Chinese society1

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Protocol

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

This study involving human participants was reviewed and approved by the Ethics Committee of the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China. All procedures were conducted in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and relevant national guidelines. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants prior to their enrollment in the study. Participants were informed of the study objectives, procedures, potential risks, and their right to withdraw at any time without penalty. Personal information and video data were anonymized and used solely for research purposes.

NOTE: This study employed a sequential explanatory mi....

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Results

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

Statistical results of psychological measurement scales

After the participants were split up into groups, the experimental and control groups' pre-test results were compared using an independent t-test. Table summarizes the analysis, which showed no discernible differences among the 10 groups. The control group and experimental group did not differ significantly in psychological measures at the baseline (Table 3). Group equivalence .......

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Discussion

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

The analysis highlights the advantages of nature-based therapies for university students who are at risk, but it is constrained by significant variation in intervention designs, small sample sizes, and inconsistent measurement methods among research. Conclusions on long-term effects on well-being are limited by the absence of longitudinal data, which also restricts generalizability to larger young populations16. The evaluation of the e-Nature model is constrained by its use of self-reported result.......

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Disclosures

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

The authors have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgements

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,

The authors thank the University of Electronic Science and Technology of China and Southwest Minzu University for their institutional support. We extend our gratitude to all participating students for their engagement and heartfelt reflections. Special thanks to the horticultural therapy facilitators and research assistants for their dedication. We also acknowledge the technical support provided by the OpenCV and NVivo platforms. This work was made possible by the collaborative efforts of the entire research team.

....

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Materials

List of materials used in this article
NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
Hydroponic Plant KitGreenJoy Co., Ltd.HJ-2023Used for plant care and observation in horticultural therapy sessions
NVivo 12.0 SoftwareQSR International Ltd.NV12-STDUsed for qualitative data analysis (grounded theory coding)
OpenCV + VGG19 ModelOpen SourceUsed for facial-expression recognition and video analysis

References

Loading...
$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$ $$\longleftharp{xx}$$, $$\longrightharp{xx}$$,
  1. Fu, X., Zhang, K., Chen, X., Chen, Z. Blue book of mental health: Report on national mental health development in China. , Social Sciences Academic Press. China. (2025).
  2. Chen, Y., Zhang, Y., Ysu, G. Prevalence of mental health problems among college s....

Access restricted. Please log in or start a trial to view this content.

Reprints and Permissions

Request permission to reuse the text or figures of this JoVE article

Request Permission

Tags

Horticultural TherapyCollege Student Mental HealthNature Based InterventionMixed Methods StudyFlower ArrangementHerbal Tea TastingPsychological ScalesFacial Expression AnalysisLife SatisfactionAffect Balance

Related Articles