Does exercise therapy improve mental and physical health in patients with major depression?
Patients with major depression (mild to moderate and severe) and older adults
Exercise therapy incorporating motivational strategies
Antidepressant medication and psychotherapy (for mild to moderate depression) or traditional treatments (for severe depression)
Mental and physical health
Exercise therapy is a valuable primary or complementary treatment for major depression that improves both mental and physical health outcomes.
Physical therapists should be aware, that several characteristics of major depression (e.g. loss of interest, motivation and energy, generalised fatigue, a low self-worth and self-confidence, fear to move, and psychosomatic complaints) and physical health problems interfere with participation in exercise. Therefore, motivational strategies should be incorporated in exercise interventions to enhance the patients' motivation and adherence in exercise programs. Implications for Rehabilitation For mild to moderate depression, the effect of exercise may be comparable with antidepressant medication and psychotherapy; for severe depression, exercise seems to be a valuable complementary therapy to the traditional treatments. Exercise therapy also improves physical health, body image, patient's coping strategies with stress, quality of life, and independence in activities of daily living in older adults. Motivational strategies should be incorporated in exercise interventions to enhance the patients' motivation.
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Jan Knapen
Huntsman (Belgium)
Davy Vancampfort
The University of Sydney
Yves Moriën
Disability and Rehabilitation
KU Leuven
Vrije Universiteit Brussel
Huntsman (Belgium)
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Knapen et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69dc3a3774eb1d62e89f535b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3109/09638288.2014.972579