11
studies meeting strict inclusion criteria for nature-deficit systematic review
Exact: 11 articles
Only 11 of 88 publications met inclusion criteria for in-depth analysis
The review followed a systematic methodology with precisely defined keyword combinations and multi-stage screening. From an initial pool of 88 publications, a critical selection process led to just 11 articles meeting inclusion criteria. This highlights the relative scarcity of rigorous research on nature deficit and forest-based well-being interventions.
From an initial pool of 88 publications, a critical selection process led to 11 articles that met the inclusion criteria and were analyzed in depth.
Read more in
Urban Singapore's green mandate, sixty years in
Mandatory greening raises developer costs before it differentiates assets, and the most cited showcase numbers come from the architects themselves.
More from The Built Review
Workplace Pricing biophilia: what the evidence is worth
Read at the primary sources, the business case for nature in buildings is narrower than advertised and strong enough to act on.
Healthcare Built to Wake: How Hospital Noise and Light Undermine Patient Sleep
Of the two environmental levers on inpatient sleep, noise control is the better proven and the cheaper, while tunable lighting for the general ward is the one the evidence does not yet support.
Workplace Germany's missing indoor-air bill
France, Britain and Australia have priced bad indoor air. Germany's missing number is a political choice, not a methodological limit.