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Harvard Mental Health Letter
Exercise helps relieve severe depression, anxiety, chronic mental illness
How useful is exercise for
people with severe depression, anxiety, or chronic mental illness?
Hundreds of studies show that it can help-but there are qualifications.
Possible explanations for the mood-enhancing effect of exercise
include:
• enhanced body image
• social support from exercise groups
• distraction from everyday worries
• heightened self-confidence from meeting a goal
• altered circulation of the neurotransmitters serotonin, norepinephrine, and the endorphins.
Exercise may also serve as
a form of predictable stress that supplies a kind of "vaccination"
against the uncontrolled stress that leads to depression and anxiety.
It's also possible that
exercise's effect on mental health is an illusion. According to some
surveys and observational studies, it could be that depression and
anxiety prevent people from exercising, rather than the other way
around. Or some feature of personality or upbringing might cause both
depression and sedentary habits.
Even controlled trials on
the subject often have problems, such as insufficient follow-up, the
difficulty of correcting for the effect of expectations, and the fact
that people who volunteer for exercise studies are not necessarily
typical.
These doubts may not
matter, because exercise has many health benefits and does little harm.
But low motivation is a problem. People are often told to find an
activity they enjoy, but depressed people don't enjoy anything much. So
it's necessary to begin slowly and remember that exercise does not have
to be strenuous to be helpful. Walking, gardening, or household work
will do.
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