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1,000 Doctors Now Prescribing Nature By Giving Free Admissions With

National Park Passes


By Andy Corbley - Feb 9, 2022

Discovery Pass by Parks Canada


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Possessing parallel tracts of stunning and unspoiled lands, Canadian healthcare practitioners are joining
onto an American movement to prescribe national parks to improve their patients’ physical and mental
health.
PaRx Canada now consists of over 1,000 physicians, nurses, and other medical professionals in B.C.,
Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Ontario who can prescribe the annual Adult Parks Canada Discovery Pass
from the Canadian parks authority—which is normally $72.25 annually for adults aged 18-64 and $61.75 for
seniors (65+).

The pass gives people free entrance to over 80 national parks, national historic sites, and national marine
conservation areas—and the nature prescription program is expected to spread across every province and
territory by the end of 2022.

A growing movement
As a growing body of evidence began to find that being in nature can have a profound influence on our
health and well-being, Park Prescriptions America began as a grassroots movement in the United States
over a decade ago, and has now spread to countries around the world.

In the States, the program allows physicians to use zip codes to find nearby parks to prescribe to patients.
Once a script has been written, through a simple software it’s easy for physicians to send reminders to fulfill
it, and to track how many times a patient has visited the prescribed park.

Park Prescriptions Canada, founded in 2020, is the first such organization in the Great White North.

“There are no costs to patients for participating in our program,” a spokesperson for PaRx told GNN.
“Participating healthcare providers have the opportunity to prescribe an Adult Parks Canada Discovery Pass,
which provides free admission to over 80 locations,” they said, adding that various park-like spaces within
major cities, such as the University of British Colombia Botanical Gardens, will also be free under the
program.

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“We are very lucky in Canada to have a world of beautiful natural spaces at our doorstep to enjoy healthy
outdoor activities. Medical research now clearly shows the positive health benefits of connecting with
nature. This exciting collaboration with PaRx is a breakthrough for how we treat mental and physical health
challenges, and couldn’t come at a better time… ” said Steven Guilbeault, Minister of Environment and
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Climate Change and Minister responsible for Parks Canada in a statement.

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A University of Saskatchewan student, speaking with CBC news, described the idea that nature should be
looked at as the “fourth pillar” of health, alongside diet, exercise, and sleep.

Dr. Melissa Lem, a Vancouver-based family physician who launched PaRX in Canada with the BC Parks
Foundation, has described being proud to help grow Canada’s first national, evidence-based nature
prescription program.

She told reporters that PaRX is hoping to expand the nature prescription to include transportation options
that stop at or include parks on their transit lines. This way those inside major cities, or people who may not
have access to a car, can share in nature’s benefits.

(WATCH the CBC video for this story below.)

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