Nature Step to Health Programme 2022-2032

Nature Step to Health Programme is a Lahti Regional Health and Environment Programme for 2022-2032. The 10-year-programme integrates health and environmental goals of the region of Päijät-Häme in Southern Finland.

The Nature Step to Health Programme supports sustainable livestyles and wellbeing

The Nature Step to Health programme is coordinated by the Wellbeing Services County of Päijät-Häme and realised in cooperation with the City of Lahti and Lahti University Consortium. Expert cooperation enables improvements in both health and the environment in the Päijät-Häme region.

The programme is motivated by major interconnected societal challenges.

These challenges include a range of public health challenges, such as non-communicable diseases (NCDs) and health risks, like asthma, diabetes, obesity, and depression, as well as environmental challenges, such as the accelerating rate of biodiversity loss and climate change.

Nature Step to Health 2022-2032 programme includes the following activities by:

Nature Step to Health 2022-2032 programme includes the following activities by:

  1. providing educational and communicational programme to implement the best practices of public health and environmental care in the spirit of Planetary Health
  2. combining the public health and environmental goals towards a more sustainable way of life at the grassroot level
  3. creating a model, which can be scaled up for other EU cities in the spirit of healthy and sustainable city development
  4. integrating multidisciplinary research and education

Discover the Nature Step to Health Programme in video:

  • Health Forest: Nature Step to Health Programme (subtitles in English)

Nature Step to Health Programme – Cooperation for sustainable and healthy living

The Nature Step to Health programme is built on multidisciplinary and cross-sectoral cooperation between various actors.

The European Commission appointed the City of Lahti as the European Green Capital in 2021 in recognition of city’s persistent environmental efforts. By combining these efforts with scientific knowledge, public health work, and the regional health and wellbeing service structure, we obtain a system that serves citizens better now and in the future.

The aim of the Nature Step to Health programme is to alter habits and behaviours of individuals according to planetary health principles.

These principles include plant-based nutrition, enhanced low carbon mobility, healthy living environment, and strengthened contacts to nature. To reach this objective, support for citizens for the use of nature-based services is required. The programme seeks for learning opportunities and exchange of practices to develop green care models and other nature-based services further.

Implementation of the Nature Step to Health programme

The Nature Step to Health programme develops healthy, socially equal, and environmentally sustainable practices and mechanisms that support our daily lives.

The programme has five goals, which are monitored by indicators:

  1. Prevention of public health challenges, such as NCDs
  2. Enhancement of biodiversity
  3. Climate change mitigation and adaptation
  4. Cooperation between health and environmental actors in education, research, and communication
  5. Economic impact on health, social, and wellbeing services and environment

The program has four tasks that cut across the programme’s goals. The goals can be reached by:

  1. Promoting healthier and more sustainable nutrition
  2. Promoting active mobility and physical activity
  3. Creating more healthy and sustainable living environments
  4. Increasing exposure to nature and improving the connection with nature

Implementation is driven by new projects, and the efficacy of the programme is monitored using statistical data, surveys, questionnaires, and multidisciplinary studies. The effectivity is assessed during feedback and interim evaluations.

Programme partners

The Nature Step to Health Programme is realised in cooperation with the Wellbeing services county of Päijät-Häme, the City of Lahti and Lahti University Consortium.

The programme is supported by researchers and experts from the University of Helsinki, Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Finnish Environment Institute, Natural Resources Institute Finland, LAB University of Applied Sciences, and WWF Finland.

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Contact information

Projects under the programme

Past projects