New research shows the benefits of thermal bathing go beyond relaxation, and may even affect mental wellbeing. James Clark-Kennedy shines a light on the findings
Hot springs bathing might provide relief for those suffering from depression or anxiety
The past 30 years has seen a large body of academic evidence amass showing the benefits of hot springs bathing for an uncooperative hand, a temperamental knee or an angry lower back.
Now we are increasingly seeing researchers explore the effects of hot springs bathing above the water surface – on mood and mind. The newer research has the interest and backing of hot springs worldwide because it holds learnings well beyond marketing, learnings that may inform such fundamentals as resort landscaping, pool and building design, mission and values.
I took part in a new research project in conjunction with the RMIT University School of Health and Biomedical Sciences in Australia and the research was recently published in the Asia Pacific Journal of Tourism Research. The findings were drawn from a study of 4,265 respondents who bathed at Australia’s largest commercial hot springs, Peninsula Hot Springs. Located on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula, the hot springs resort opened in 2005 welcomes more than 430,000 visitors annually. An expansion is under way to accommodate 600,000 visitors per year by 2018.
‘Me time’ or healing time? Therapy appears to be a large driver of Australian hot springs visitation. In an industry that has mostly marketed to domestic tourists seeking relaxation and escape over the past several decades, the study found that bathers are increasingly seeking therapy for a wide range of medical conditions, with significant benefits achieved: hot springs bathers report they are beating pain and moving more easily.
The study found that what was previously viewed as a tourist attraction is important to 28 per cent of respondents for the relief of specific medical conditions, and that 99 per cent of bathers with medical conditions feel better after bathing in the hot springs. Musculoskeletal issues – combining back pain, arthritis and joint pain – were the most prevalent medical conditions, with 22 per cent of bathers who responded reporting these problems, including 14 per cent who suffer regularly from back pain.
Brook Ramage, general manager of Peninsula Hot Springs, says the findings provide further credibility for Peninsula Hot Springs’ health and wellness initiatives, which include warm water exercise programmes and a DVD that caters to those seeking back pain relief. “The research provides us with evidence to support what we have been seeing for many years,” he explains. “What we can say from the study is that bathing in geothermal mineral water puts your body in the best possible place to heal itself.”
Among the 14 per cent of respondents who had back pain, 88 per cent of them reported some sort of relief (39 per cent reported ‘significant relief’ – defined as lasting more than two days and/or reducing reliance on other treatments – and 49 per cent reported ‘slight relief’) and of the 6 per cent of respondents with arthritis, 86 per cent reported relief (39 per cent of those reported significant relief, while 47 per cent reported slight relief).
The findings that balneology reduced their reliance on medication might be of great significance as we see more hot springs emerge: the pools are more than just entertainment, escape or indulgence.
These findings are consistent with a 2014 systematic review of 18 European randomised controlled trials of musculoskeletal conditions, which concluded that balneotherapy is an effective remedy for lower back pain, as well as knee and hand osteoarthritis.
Above the water, into the mind With the World Health Organisation estimating that 350 million people worldwide suffer from depression, it is of note that hot springs bathing also appears to provide significant relief for people with depression and stress or anxiety. Of the 11 per cent of survey respondents reporting stress or anxiety, 89 per cent reported relief, and of the 5 per cent of survey respondents reporting depression, 71 per cent reported relief. Seventy-one percent of those with depression rated their condition as ‘severe,’ with treatment from a health practitioner required, with 34 per cent of those rating hot springs bathing as providing significant relief – defined as lasting more than two days and reducing reliance on other treatments – and 37 per cent rating slight relief.
Another major finding for mental health is that bathing in hot springs shows significant sleep benefits. The research found that 82 per cent of respondents reported better sleep after hot springs bathing, with 62 per cent of those saying that the effect lasted for two days or longer. Additionally, 77 per cent of respondents with insomnia reported relief.
However, it is unlikely that the sleep benefits can be attributed to the specifics of high magnesium content or other mechanics of the geothermal mineral spring water alone. While bathing itself may be relaxing, the design of Peninsula Hot Springs also further encourages relaxation, with the provision of a specific relaxation room along with deck chairs and seats that overlook tranquil natural settings. Are hot springs bathers sleeping better because of a geothermal mineral bath, for having made an ‘escape’ from their worlds, or for resort qualities such as landscaping and natural surroundings?
“That the bathing environment generally precludes the use of mobile phones and other technology may further allow people to escape their usual routines and more fully relax and immerse themselves in nature, thereby further enhancing the relaxing effects of bathing,” says professor Marc Cohen, supervisor of the study and head of the Wellness Discipline at the School of Health and Biomedical Sciences at RMIT University.
Nature is key While you probably could establish a geothermal mineral springs by drilling below a shopping mall, it’s unlikely to offer the same benefits to bathers. Mineral elements such as magnesium and sulphur have been found to be important to muscle relaxation and alleviating pain over many years of study, but this new research found it might be the natural setting of the springs, including things like the sound of the water, that’s just as important.
While ‘relaxation,’ ‘peace and tranquility,’ ‘indulgence’ and ‘escape’ were the most important motivators for hot springs bathing at Peninsula Hot Springs, ‘connection with nature’ was rated as an important motivator by 74 per cent of those surveyed, and ‘the sounds of water and nature’ were rated as either important or somewhat important by 72 per cent of respondents. “These factors have a huge bearing on our mental health, reflected in the extremely important relief findings for anxiety, depression and insomnia, and the excellent outcomes for guests’ sleep,” explains Peninsula Hot Springs founder and CEO Charles Davidson.
Social connectivity Over a decade ago, Davidson envisioned a place where quiet escape in tranquil surroundings could be offered parallel to a social experience. While some hot springs destinations may pitch a serene escape, it seems social bathing with free-flowing conversation is an important draw for many. “Peninsula Hot Springs often has bookings from families with three and four generations from the same family taking time out to enjoy and connect with their pure nature,” says Davidson.
The study asked regular bathers to give their reasons for visiting the hot springs, and more than 60 per cent rated the social aspect of connecting with friends and family as important, with nearly 70 per cent rating ‘being with other people’ as an important or somewhat important factor that positively influences their bathing experience – another pathway for future mental health research.
The study’s findings suggest an important evolution in social connectivity towards relaxation in healthy surroundings, and there are apparent outcomes for mental health. Peninsula Hot Springs sees a role for itself in a combination of these elements which it calls ‘community connectivity’; in 2016, it became a corporate friend of Mental Health Australia, and last year it partnered with an organisation that helps improve the quality of life of people who have muscle, bone and joint conditions.
The geothermal springs industry worldwide is expected to grow at a rate of approximately 7 per cent over the next 10 years, with Australian investment soaring – but predominantly with a relaxation and escape offering. “Further research is important for this growing industry,” says Davidson. “We can apply and integrate the learnings to constantly improve facilities, programmes and even landscapes for people who are coming for therapeutic health and wellbeing outcomes.”
Read more from this issue of Attractions Management magazine
View contents of Attractions Management 2017 issue 2
Wellness communities: Europe
Part 2 of our series explores some of
the most exciting European wellness
communities in development
Promotional feature: Babor
CEO Michael Schummert explains how the
company’s expertise in results-driven treatments makes its precision
‘Made in Germany’ products more relevant than ever before
An opportunity to reimagine one of the UK’s most recognisable towers has been formally
opened by Rivington Hark, as St Johns Beacon invites operators and partners to shape its
next phase. [more...]
New research shows the benefits of thermal bathing go beyond relaxation, and may even affect mental wellbeing. James Clark-Kennedy shines a light on the findings
Hot springs bathing might provide relief for those suffering from depression or anxiety
The past 30 years has seen a large body of academic evidence amass showing the benefits of hot springs bathing for an uncooperative hand, a temperamental knee or an angry lower back.
Now we are increasingly seeing researchers explore the effects of hot springs bathing above the water surface – on mood and mind. The newer research has the interest and backing of hot springs worldwide because it holds learnings well beyond marketing, learnings that may inform such fundamentals as resort landscaping, pool and building design, mission and values.
I took part in a new research project in conjunction with the RMIT University School of Health and Biomedical Sciences in Australia and the research was recently published in the Asia Pacific Journal of Tourism Research. The findings were drawn from a study of 4,265 respondents who bathed at Australia’s largest commercial hot springs, Peninsula Hot Springs. Located on Victoria’s Mornington Peninsula, the hot springs resort opened in 2005 welcomes more than 430,000 visitors annually. An expansion is under way to accommodate 600,000 visitors per year by 2018.
‘Me time’ or healing time? Therapy appears to be a large driver of Australian hot springs visitation. In an industry that has mostly marketed to domestic tourists seeking relaxation and escape over the past several decades, the study found that bathers are increasingly seeking therapy for a wide range of medical conditions, with significant benefits achieved: hot springs bathers report they are beating pain and moving more easily.
The study found that what was previously viewed as a tourist attraction is important to 28 per cent of respondents for the relief of specific medical conditions, and that 99 per cent of bathers with medical conditions feel better after bathing in the hot springs. Musculoskeletal issues – combining back pain, arthritis and joint pain – were the most prevalent medical conditions, with 22 per cent of bathers who responded reporting these problems, including 14 per cent who suffer regularly from back pain.
Brook Ramage, general manager of Peninsula Hot Springs, says the findings provide further credibility for Peninsula Hot Springs’ health and wellness initiatives, which include warm water exercise programmes and a DVD that caters to those seeking back pain relief. “The research provides us with evidence to support what we have been seeing for many years,” he explains. “What we can say from the study is that bathing in geothermal mineral water puts your body in the best possible place to heal itself.”
Among the 14 per cent of respondents who had back pain, 88 per cent of them reported some sort of relief (39 per cent reported ‘significant relief’ – defined as lasting more than two days and/or reducing reliance on other treatments – and 49 per cent reported ‘slight relief’) and of the 6 per cent of respondents with arthritis, 86 per cent reported relief (39 per cent of those reported significant relief, while 47 per cent reported slight relief).
The findings that balneology reduced their reliance on medication might be of great significance as we see more hot springs emerge: the pools are more than just entertainment, escape or indulgence.
These findings are consistent with a 2014 systematic review of 18 European randomised controlled trials of musculoskeletal conditions, which concluded that balneotherapy is an effective remedy for lower back pain, as well as knee and hand osteoarthritis.
Above the water, into the mind With the World Health Organisation estimating that 350 million people worldwide suffer from depression, it is of note that hot springs bathing also appears to provide significant relief for people with depression and stress or anxiety. Of the 11 per cent of survey respondents reporting stress or anxiety, 89 per cent reported relief, and of the 5 per cent of survey respondents reporting depression, 71 per cent reported relief. Seventy-one percent of those with depression rated their condition as ‘severe,’ with treatment from a health practitioner required, with 34 per cent of those rating hot springs bathing as providing significant relief – defined as lasting more than two days and reducing reliance on other treatments – and 37 per cent rating slight relief.
Another major finding for mental health is that bathing in hot springs shows significant sleep benefits. The research found that 82 per cent of respondents reported better sleep after hot springs bathing, with 62 per cent of those saying that the effect lasted for two days or longer. Additionally, 77 per cent of respondents with insomnia reported relief.
However, it is unlikely that the sleep benefits can be attributed to the specifics of high magnesium content or other mechanics of the geothermal mineral spring water alone. While bathing itself may be relaxing, the design of Peninsula Hot Springs also further encourages relaxation, with the provision of a specific relaxation room along with deck chairs and seats that overlook tranquil natural settings. Are hot springs bathers sleeping better because of a geothermal mineral bath, for having made an ‘escape’ from their worlds, or for resort qualities such as landscaping and natural surroundings?
“That the bathing environment generally precludes the use of mobile phones and other technology may further allow people to escape their usual routines and more fully relax and immerse themselves in nature, thereby further enhancing the relaxing effects of bathing,” says professor Marc Cohen, supervisor of the study and head of the Wellness Discipline at the School of Health and Biomedical Sciences at RMIT University.
Nature is key While you probably could establish a geothermal mineral springs by drilling below a shopping mall, it’s unlikely to offer the same benefits to bathers. Mineral elements such as magnesium and sulphur have been found to be important to muscle relaxation and alleviating pain over many years of study, but this new research found it might be the natural setting of the springs, including things like the sound of the water, that’s just as important.
While ‘relaxation,’ ‘peace and tranquility,’ ‘indulgence’ and ‘escape’ were the most important motivators for hot springs bathing at Peninsula Hot Springs, ‘connection with nature’ was rated as an important motivator by 74 per cent of those surveyed, and ‘the sounds of water and nature’ were rated as either important or somewhat important by 72 per cent of respondents. “These factors have a huge bearing on our mental health, reflected in the extremely important relief findings for anxiety, depression and insomnia, and the excellent outcomes for guests’ sleep,” explains Peninsula Hot Springs founder and CEO Charles Davidson.
Social connectivity Over a decade ago, Davidson envisioned a place where quiet escape in tranquil surroundings could be offered parallel to a social experience. While some hot springs destinations may pitch a serene escape, it seems social bathing with free-flowing conversation is an important draw for many. “Peninsula Hot Springs often has bookings from families with three and four generations from the same family taking time out to enjoy and connect with their pure nature,” says Davidson.
The study asked regular bathers to give their reasons for visiting the hot springs, and more than 60 per cent rated the social aspect of connecting with friends and family as important, with nearly 70 per cent rating ‘being with other people’ as an important or somewhat important factor that positively influences their bathing experience – another pathway for future mental health research.
The study’s findings suggest an important evolution in social connectivity towards relaxation in healthy surroundings, and there are apparent outcomes for mental health. Peninsula Hot Springs sees a role for itself in a combination of these elements which it calls ‘community connectivity’; in 2016, it became a corporate friend of Mental Health Australia, and last year it partnered with an organisation that helps improve the quality of life of people who have muscle, bone and joint conditions.
The geothermal springs industry worldwide is expected to grow at a rate of approximately 7 per cent over the next 10 years, with Australian investment soaring – but predominantly with a relaxation and escape offering. “Further research is important for this growing industry,” says Davidson. “We can apply and integrate the learnings to constantly improve facilities, programmes and even landscapes for people who are coming for therapeutic health and wellbeing outcomes.”
Read more from this issue of Attractions Management magazine
View contents of Attractions Management 2017 issue 2
Wellness communities: Europe
Part 2 of our series explores some of
the most exciting European wellness
communities in development
Promotional feature: Babor
CEO Michael Schummert explains how the
company’s expertise in results-driven treatments makes its precision
‘Made in Germany’ products more relevant than ever before
Hotel de France, located on the British Isle of Jersey, has created a wellness retreat package
that includes a hot yoga session that will take place in Jersey Zoo’s butterfly sanctuary.
A new immersive attraction designed to transport visitors into the final hours of ancient Pompeii
is preparing to open near the world-famous archaeological site in southern Italy.
Experience design company, BRC Imagination Arts, has completed a transition that sees founder
Bob Rogers pass ownership of the business to four long-serving senior executives, while
remaining actively involved with the company.
Movie Park Germany has opened a new Paramount Pictures-themed attraction as part of its 30th
anniversary celebrations, using immersive storytelling and adaptive reuse to reinforce the park’s
longstanding “Hollywood in Germany” positioning.
Therme Manchester’s 28-acre development, which will include interconnected glass pavilions
that measure 65,000sq m, will be the largest bathing and wellbeing attraction in the world once
complete, according to prof David Russell, CEO of Therme UK.
Efteling has opened Hooghmoed, a new family drop tower designed to broaden the appeal of its
recently launched Sirene Island themed area and introduce younger visitors to thrill attractions.
A proposed Puy du Fou development near Bicester and Universal Destinations and Experiences’
planned resort in Bedford are emerging as part of a wider transformation of the Oxford–
Cambridge Growth Corridor into a major centre for UK leisure and tourism inv
Shedd Aquarium has opened the Immersion Theater developed in partnership with SimEx-
Iwerks, as part of a wider strategy to enhance the guest experience and create additional
revenue opportunities.
The UK government has announced a temporary reduction in VAT on visitor attractions and
children’s meals as part of a summer cost-of-living support package designed to stimulate the
visitor economy and encourage family days out.
As designer Yinka Ilori prepares for his first solo gallery show in London, he speaks exclusively
to CLADmag about his mission to spread joy, the power of play, and his bold approach to using
colour (including the colours you won’t see in his work).
The government of Thailand is exploring plans for a THB300bn (£6.3bn, US$8.3bn)
entertainment complex in the country’s Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC), with officials
proposing a large-scale theme park and sports destination as part of a broader tourism and
economic development strategy.
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