HEALTH NEWS OF THE DAY: STAY ACTIVE AND...
...you'll be happy. Read on:
"You're probably familiar with the post-workout feeling that, for the
next little while, all is well with the world. That exercise-induced
glow can wear off pretty quickly, of course, but does that mean that any
happiness imparted by being inactivity is temporary and fleeting? No, according to a study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology, which found that regular activity is linked with greater happiness over periods of years.
This Canadian study analyzed data from eight National Population
Health Survey cycles, spanning 15 years, to see how activity level at
the beginning of the survey and then years later was associated with
happiness. In its design, it attempted to get around that, in the short
term, exercise might be linked with greater happiness because happier
people might be more likely to exercise. The researchers looked at data
on activity and happiness that was collected every two years.
Respondents
to the survey were asked about participation in several kinds of
leisure-time physical activity and were divided into active and inactive
groups based on their daily energy expenditure. They were also asked to
characterize how happy they were, and were divided into happy and
unhappy groups based on those replies. People who were unhappy when
first surveyed were excluded from the study.
The
researchers found that being physically active was associated with 85
percent higher odds of being happy at the start of the study. Among
happy people, those who reported being inactive at the beginning of the
survey were 49% and 45% more likely to be unhappy two and four years
later than people who reported being active. Happy people who were
inactive in two consecutive cycles were twice as likely to be unhappy
two years later than people who were active at both times. People who
changed from being inactive to active were more likely to report feeling
happy two and four years later.
These finding suggest that
changes in activity level affects changes in mood over long periods of
time. Today's run is likely helping your mind not just today."
"Storms make trees take deeper roots."--Dolly Parton
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