Exercise has 'similar effect' to therapy, study on depression shows

(medicalxpress.com)

93 points | by PaulHoule 11 hours ago ago

104 comments

  • resoluteteeth 10 hours ago ago

    Exercise, therapy, and antidepressants have all been shown to have similar effect sizes for depression. It seems like some people take that to mean that therapy and antidepressants are pointless but unless there's some reason to think that the effects are mutually exclusive, a more reasonable interpretation is probably that it's good to try to do all of these things if possible if you are depressed.

    • spiffytech 9 hours ago ago

      And while they affect a similar percentage of people, they don't necessarily affect the same individuals. Same for therapy modalities, which often show similar efficacy in studies, but different efficacy for any given person.

      So you've got to try different things and figure out what works for you.

      • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

        > Same for therapy modalities, which often show similar efficacy in studies, but different efficacy for any given person.

        It's even more complicated than that - you can probably click well and succeed with one therapist and get a completely ineffective treatment by another therapist and I'm not sure we even understand why that well (saying one therapist is better than the other is not always true). With it being the way it is , I think A.I actually could be another tool for people to try; not currently but once it improves enough with memory and reliability (I know many people are gonna downvote this but what's your alternative?).

    • weli 9 hours ago ago

      The problem is that people who are depressed often don't have the energy to change their lifestyle to start exercise, which requires significant effort.

      That's why psychiatrists will suggest antidepressants or Electroconvulsive therapy (in extreme cases of depression) because clients are unable to help themselves.

      • bobomonkey 5 hours ago ago

        Happens for physical heath too. I jumpstarted progress with GLP-1 and Statins and now I probably don't need them because I enjoy exercising and eating well.

    • jl6 9 hours ago ago

      Although exercise is the only one of those three that anyone can do immediately, right now, for free. There are barriers to obtaining therapy and medication which may be insurmountable for many.

      • an hour ago ago
        [deleted]
    • nasir 9 hours ago ago

      Mens sana in corpore sano

      Taking the antidepressant has become the dominant go to approach as it is more commercially profitable for the seller and easier to commit to for the taker.

      • graemep 9 hours ago ago

        Its also cheaper. A lot cheaper.

        In the UK a GP can just lot prescribe an anti-depressant. There are waiting lists for NHS therapy and paying privately is expensive.

        • giglamesh 8 hours ago ago

          What does "lot prescribe" mean?

          • graemep 4 minutes ago ago

            Bad edit "just prescribe"

      • jmye 9 hours ago ago

        > Taking the antidepressant has become the dominant go to approach

        Cite?

      • GeoAtreides 8 hours ago ago

        i fully agree, but here's an advice for next time: HN (specifically americans, anglos too but not as much) is VERY pro medication. any suggestion they're taking too much pills will be downvoted

        it's easier to just let them have their soma and say nothing

  • pjerem 10 hours ago ago

    I don't get what's new ?

    It's a known fact that exercise and good lifestyle are good for the mental health. But isn't the inability to maintain a good lifestyle one of the first symptoms of depression ?

    • Sharlin 10 hours ago ago

      Exactly. Depression is defined in part as being the inability to effectively do those things.

      • jmye 9 hours ago ago

        Why is this downvoted? It's literally two of the questions on the PHQ9, which is used to, you know, diagnose/measure depression.

        Maybe some of y'all should stick to the javascript threads and stop pretending to be experts in healthcare. Listen more, speak less, kids.

    • almost_usual 9 hours ago ago

      You have to work on your will to live incrementally.

  • joe_mamba 10 hours ago ago

    How to solve most cases of depression, make sure to get all these (if you can):

    - good diet with no junk food, alcohol, drugs and stimulants

    - regular exercise and outdoor time

    - good sleep hygiene

    - regular healthy social interactions

    - eliminate environmental stressors (job/financial stress, relationship stress, noise pollution, etc)

    Of course, not everyone can have everything and some of those aren't 100% under your control, but ultimately it becomes your responsibility to try fix them if you want your situation to improve, since nobody else will.

    • staticassertion 10 hours ago ago

      I think this is true, but oof that's a heavy list. For one thing, food, alcohol, drugs, and stimulants, all have addictive properties that are almost certainly comorbid with depression. Dropping those is rough.

      Exercise is perhaps one of the easier ones but, personally, I've found it incredible to reflect on how absolutely bad my childhood "gym" classes were. At no point did we actually... go to a gym. That was never normalized for us. We sort of just learned how to do jumping jacks when we were told to, that sort of thing, and it was all structured for us. There was no habit forming, no "how to do this once there's no one around to structure it for you". In my experience, people who go to the gym get "brought in" by someone in their life who can help them build that structure. For someone missing it, well, you're truly on your own in a rather stressful environment.

      Sleep hygiene is good but, again, I suspect tricky here.

      Regular social interactions, another heavy lift! What do you do to build up a network of people in your life? Social structures don't just magically appear, and once again, they're usually just handed to you for most of your life and once those fall away you're in quite a spot trying to recover or build anew.

      I think the environmental stressors may be the roughest, hard to say. Eliminating financial stress is something that can take decades. Noise pollution? That's really quite out of my control.

      All of these are great things to work on but I suppose my read of them is "wow, being depressed seems really fucking hard if you have to do these things to get out of it".

      • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

        > At no point did we actually... go to a gym

        You really don't have to go to a gym if you don't like it , or do something "hard" that many people dislike like running. You can simply walk briskly for 150 minutes a week (which is the recommended dose, and which 80% of Americans and other Westerners don't meet). That is time outside (vitamin D) + moving your entire body - less chronic pain, better joints, better bones etc. I think even this alone without resistance training (which is important) could be enough to help most people with morbidities and depression. Our machine is simply not meant to remain stationary all day and be bombarded with social media and TV, there's no wonder neurosis is off the charts.

        • staticassertion 9 hours ago ago

          I actually do exercise. What I'm suggesting here is that there was never anyone helping me to build that habit forming, it has been entirely "self serve".

        • joe_mamba 9 hours ago ago

          >You really don't have to go to a gym if you don't like it ... You can simply walk briskly for 150 minutes a week

          I don't like flossing and brushing my teeth either, but yet I still do it regularly. In fact, I never met anyone who brushes they teeth out of enjoyment, but out of habit.

          Similarly, the habit of exercise(and other health related activities) needs to be cultivated, you don't have to like it, you just do it because it's what's best for you.

          If you take no accountability over your own actions and agency and expect life is about doing only the things you enjoy, then no amount of SSRIs or expensive therapy sessions will fix this.

          • bubblewand 9 hours ago ago

            Maybe I’m an odd duck, but my key trigger to brush my teeth is an aversion to how gross my mouth is if I don’t, not habit. The reward is immediate, and the task fast. Noticing my mouth is gross catches any failure of the habit of teeth brushing in my routines. The habit developed from repetition but is very much not necessary to get me to do it, there’s an actual, natural, reliable trigger for it independent of the habit.

          • hn_throw2025 7 hours ago ago

            I’ve tried various kinds of exercise over the years, and I think the key is to keep experimenting until you find something sustainable that you actually like. And make it as frictionless (in terms of getting started) as possible.

            I use a walking pad at home. Each night after dinner, I’ll go into that room and watch a movie (or half) on my iPad when I’m walking on it. I did over 3 miles last night (at a moderate pace), and that’s pretty typical. Not because I’m trying to work out, just because I’m into the movie and don’t want to stop. If I had friction of needing fresh gym clothes, having to drive somewhere, or thinking about if the weather is nice enough for an outside walk, I would probably be too lazy to walk most evenings. If I didn’t have the entertainment of the movie, I would probably find the exercise boring and not feel incentivised. I do it because I’m looking forward to the movie and I know I’ll feel great afterwards.

            As they say, you need to design your habits for the laziest, most unmotivated version of yourself.

          • bulbar 6 hours ago ago

            When you suffer from a clinical depression, no amount of accountability will fix this.

            Also, when you are low on mental resources, don't try to do something that you dislike to begin with just because you believe it's optimal. Instead, do the thing that's potentially non optimal but sustainable. For example, start to do regular walks instead of going to the gym.

            To be honest, I am kind of shocked of the comments here on HN regarding this topic.

          • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

            I'm with you up to a point. If you have time watch Dr Liberman's video about why people resist exercise so much despite wanting to do it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5vzS7-MtObo&

            There's nothing new here, we all know this, but he brings the point home very well. I think brisk walking is within the realm of possibilites for most people. Running and lifting - idk. I personally love it but so many people I know have such a huge psychological resistance to doing it. So I say lets get people to at least walk!

            • joe_mamba 9 hours ago ago

              >why people resist exercise so much despite wanting to do it:

              I don't need to watch a video, I can just do introspection and I know why I resit exercise. In fact, most people will watch the self help videos and learn the exact same things they already knew, if only they'd be honest with themselves about their issue and not try to avoid accountability. But it's easier to accept things when a professional specialist tells them to you, often for money.

              The problem is many people want for someone to tell them that the issues they have are not their fault, so they can feel better about not doing anything to improve their situation.

              > I think brisk walking is within the realm of possibilites for most people.

              Walks are good except when you live in a concrete hellhole full with busy traffic. That's why I avoid telling people exactly what exercise they should do, as that depends on their health, location, financial situation and lifestyle.

              • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

                > I don't need to watch a video, I can just do introspection and I know why I resit exercise

                Well just if anyone reads this , Liberman's point is that we are biologically programmed to NOT want to exercise unless there's a clear biological incentive - like getting food, or a social incentive - like a tribe participating in a dance or children playing. Since for millions of years we couldn't tell when the next calory of food would come - exercising for the heck of it was insanity and you wouldn't survive. You expended so many calories just gathering and hunting you mostly rested when you could. So basically our biology does not fit into the world of calory abundance we live in.

                • joe_mamba 8 hours ago ago

                  Because the concept of exercise is a very modern and unnatural thing for humans. We've been moving all day to make a living for most of our history, only when we switched to sedentary desk jobs did we discover the need to do exercise to maintain our health, but that's like the past 50+ years compared to 50K year history of being hunter gatherers. It doesn't take a prestigious scientist to connect these dots.

      • joe_mamba 10 hours ago ago

        > "wow, being depressed seems really fucking hard if you have to do these things to get out of it".

        Yeah IT IS hard, I didn't say it's easy, I just said what you need to not be depressed. Whether everyone can get all those is another issue.

        The thing is that in the case when you don't have all of these, adding unhealthy habits on top, doesn't make your situation better.

        • staticassertion 10 hours ago ago

          Yes, sorry, I think other posts are quite critical of yours so maybe you think this was me trying to be like "your post is bad". I think you're right (though I think that medication and therapy are often critical to help kickstart healthier habits, and it's worth noting how heavy a lift those things are), but it is just notable to me how hard those things are. I am not depressed, thankfully, because if I had to rebuild a social life or go to the gym to fix myself I'd be fucked.

      • asmor 9 hours ago ago

        Our entire economic system is built on inducing financial stress.

    • Aaargh20318 10 hours ago ago

      I can't remember where I read it, but it always stuck with me: most cases of depression can be solved with a one-time deposit of $20 million in the patient's bank account.

      A lot of the time, what is diagnosed as depression is actually a very valid reaction to being in a shitty situation. I myself ended up at a psychiatrist due to being stuck in a shitty job with me being too exhausted and anxious to do anything about it. What eventually 'cured' me wasn't any of the sessions with the shrink but being laid off in a company restructuring with a nice severance package that allowed me to take a couple of months to decompress and look for a job that was a better fit.

      • joe_mamba 10 hours ago ago

        >most cases of depression can be solved with a one-time deposit of $20 million in the patient's bank account.

        Yes, but actually not always. If you have someone overweight because they're only eating pizza, cheetos and cola everyday and you use a magic wand to give them Thor's physique, how long will their new physique last with their diet until they devolve back into a slug monster?

        Money tends to run out, very quickly for some people. If you aren't able to keep your life in order when you're poor, you'll probably squander it all quickly too if you win the lottery. Like a friend of mine said "Thank God nobody gave me a million dollars when I was a drug addict, I would have OD's in a day".

        People with self destructive tendencies don't need 20 million dollars, they need therapy, a stable job, and a loving caring community, something that fewer people have nowadays.

        • alphawhisky 7 hours ago ago

          This is a pretty poor take. Everyone knows that it's easier to maintain fitness/muscle than build it. The same is true with money, it's much easier to coast or make moves financially when you have headroom. There's a type of financial self-sabotage people often commit when they're in an "unwinnable" situation called Doom Spending. I feel like the same psychological principles that convince a person in debt to finance their groceries also makes them lean into eating when overweight, lean into laziness when unemployed, etc. They always say that the hardest part is starting, but when it comes to money, fitness, employment, not everyone starts from the same place, and without being/having been at rock bottom you can't speak to the perspective of getting out of it. Agreed that a holistic approach is the only proper way though.

          • joe_mamba 2 hours ago ago

            >This is a pretty poor take.

            It isn't when you look at how many rich people are depressed and suicidal. Making millions of dollars isn't a cure for depression.

    • xnorswap 10 hours ago ago

      The trouble is, this reads like "Just don't be depressed", since this is almost effectively a list of (anti-) symptoms of depression.

      • jdiff 10 hours ago ago

        And the ones that aren't simply "don't be depressed" are a lottery for anyone, even those not suffering depression. In the US, current projections are for 300 new jobs per state per month this year. Even accounting for retirees and deaths, last I looked at the numbers, there have been 2M more new additions to the workforce (people turning 18) than there are new jobs for those new additions, all competing with the large unemployed and laid off populations.

        It's similarly often not easy to solve relationship stressors or noise pollution.

        • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

          I agree we are headed into very unstable times, all the more reason for people to exercise. The stress relief effect is magical, and if you do it outside you get some fresh air and vitamin D. Exercise isn't a magic cure to make everyone honkey dorey but I do believe it should be seen as one of the best (and free) tools we have to maintain mental health.

      • joe_mamba 10 hours ago ago

        No, it isn't like "Just don't be depressed", I know it's very difficult for people to get all of those combined, that's what I said you should strive to get all of them if you want to cure your depression.

        SSRIs or exercise won't make your financial or relationship issues go away so you'll still be depressed unless you can fix all the issues bothering you.

        • Sharlin 10 hours ago ago

          The problem is that depression by definition makes it 100x harder to do any of those things.

          • magicalhippo 9 hours ago ago

            In my case it wasn't that they were hard to do, it was more that I just didn't have the motivation to do them.

            The change needed was to actually have a reason to start doing any of them. For me, that started with being honest with myself. Deep down inside I knew the reason for my depression, I "just" had to be honest about it to be able to take control over it.

            Once I did that I gained some motivation to do those things on that list, and so I started doing them. And slowly but surely I got out of my hole.

            Every now and then I notice I'm halfway back down a hole. I stopped doing those things. Again I have to be honest with myself about why, and with that I can start the climb back out, starting exercising again, eating better etc.

            • jaapz 9 hours ago ago

              I was typing something a bit snarky, but I went back and thought a little and I just want to say good for you on getting out of that hole and I hope you stay out of it!

          • joe_mamba 10 hours ago ago

            Well yeah, but you gotta start somewhere, and it's not gonna get better if you drink cola, beer everyday and stay up until 2AM watching netflix.

            • rincebrain 10 hours ago ago

              I think GP's point is that "just do it" shows a lack of understanding that an inability to "just do X" is often a symptom of depression that leads to people not talking about it, because people who haven't experienced it think you must be lying about having decided to do something and not actually then doing it.

              Consider: there was a study about a guy who was paralyzed from the waist down, who got an implant to bypass the injury, and with a year+ of walking with the implant, could eventually walk to a limited extent without the implant.[1]

              This suggests walking can be used to treat loss of ability to walk. Unfortunately, there's a catch-22 there...

              ...and so too with inability to make yourself do anything.

              [1] - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-023-06094-5

            • 10 hours ago ago
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            • jmye 9 hours ago ago

              > Well yeah, but you gotta start somewhere

              Wait, I thought those things solved depression? Why are you hedging now? Did your initial analysis suck, and you're just now realizing it? Are you figuring out that maybe this is slightly more complex than "just be happy" and that maybe you're not the only person on the planet who's ever thought about this?

              • joe_mamba 9 hours ago ago

                Your comment makes no sense. I never said "just be happy". Reformulate it and add more substance so we have something to talk about.

      • taneq 10 hours ago ago

        This is always what leaps out at me with this kind of “live better be happier” article. Yeah, if you’re sleeping well, eating well, working out regularly, spending quality time with friends, and have a healthy work life balance, you probably aren’t depressed. Might there be some possibility, perchance, that this is because any single one of those factors is almost impossible when in the pit of despair, let alone all of them at once? It’s like saying glasses cause short sightedness because hey, you almost never see someone with good eyesight wearing glasses.

    • randusername 9 hours ago ago

      > How to solve most cases of depression

      Tread carefully friend, I agree this is a good list to _prevent_ the most common forms of depression, but some will think you are framing major clinical depression as a personal failing.

      Some people slide into a hole of their own making. Others get thrown into the abyss by external factors. Grief, trauma, abuse, crises of repressed identity, poverty and poor prospects. Life can be brutal.

      I highly, highly recommend The Noonday Demon: An Atlas of Depression (Solomon) for anyone that is interested in a comprehensive view of depression.

      • joe_mamba 9 hours ago ago

        >Some people slide into a hole of their own making Others get thrown into the abyss by external factors.

        Yes, true, a lot of the times it is from external factors (ask me how I know), but what people miss is that even in that case, it's still on you to get yourself out since SSRIs and therapy session won't fix the situation you fell into, nor will anyone else come to get you out, unless maybe you're lucky enough to have an incredible family, community or support network.

        It's still your responsibility to get yourself out even when your situation is not your fault. That's the sad truth about life, you have to play the hand you're dealt, instead of being depressed you've been dealt a bad hand. It's not fair, but that's how it works.

        • randusername 9 hours ago ago

          From one internet stranger to another, both vaguely alluding to heavy things in our lived experience, I respectfully invite you to consider a "yes and".

          Yes, we all must accept responsibility in changing our circumstances. _And_ we all can accept responsibility for helping others do the same.

          Some people need to hear the first part that you shared. Others need to hear the the second part that I am sharing.

    • vrosas 10 hours ago ago

      This is exactly the kind of list that is both not true (solving depression is not a checklist) and COMPLETELY unhelpful to anyone actually dealing with depression. It's like saying "just make more money" to someone with financial struggles.

      • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

        I see your point but I think there's nuance here

        First of all exercise should be seen as one of the first lines of defense against not only depression but chronic health problems (which also lead to depression). So you shouldn't wait until you are depressed to start exercising - ideally it is something you do all the time. Secondly - someone who's depressed is not keen on most things - including talking to a therapist , yet we still encourage them to do it. If you have the will power to pay hundreds of dollars a session to talk to a complete stranger, in theory you may have the willpower to walk birskly for 150 minutes a week. As a society we should simply encourage everyone no matter what age or state of mind to do that.

    • wvh 10 hours ago ago

      You just described causes of depression, like divorce, social isolation and being unemployed. I know there are people that can feel free in a place as horrible as a concentration camp, but most of us have some basic needs that have to be met to feel OK and have some hope.

      Some people have actual neurotransmitter imbalances, but many of us just have monkey brains that don't know how to deal with (real, abstract) modern-day stressors that trigger a fight-or-flight response.

    • bulbar 7 hours ago ago

      That's a dangerous take. People that suffer from a clinical depression oftentimes won't be able to do any of these things and this has nothing to do with responsibility and everything with suffering from a depression.

      From what I have learned from friends working in the field, meds often work as an enabler, allowing people to do some of the things that are known to improve their condition further.

      If you think you suffer from depression, don't keep trying to "just buckle up", don't keep trying to "just need to take responsibility". Go talk to professionals, therapists and/or psychiatrists. Mental disorders do things to a person outside of their control.

    • Insanity 9 hours ago ago

      The last one you list is hardest to fix. And that in turn causes the others. For example, if you have a stressful job, you might:

      1. Sleep less (job stress or long hours keeping you up)

      2. Eat less healthy (coping mechanism for job stress, and it’s faster)

      3. Have less time for the higher quality social interactions.

    • GuB-42 7 hours ago ago

      Sounds like a catch 22 to me.

      All of what you describe besides environmental stressors are symptoms of depression. So, to solve depression, you must first solve depression.

      And even the environmental stressors are something we could work with as a society though welfare, environment regulations, etc... But how people react to them is also a symptom. There are depressive people with the best of situations, and people who enjoy life in the worst of situations. What often strikes me in documentaries about warzones, places of repression and extreme poverty or crippling diseases is how "normal" people seem to be, they enjoy themselves as if everything was fine. So, while reducing environmental stressors work, it is not the end of it.

      The take may be that treating the symptoms of depression could work in treating the root cause, a positive feedback loop. But if done through lifestyle change, unfortunately, the treatment is coercion, you can't rely on the willpower of people who have none because of the disease.

    • butlike 8 hours ago ago

      I don't agree with the elimination of things. Removing things can be its own source of tribulation. I agree on all other parts, though

    • z3t4 9 hours ago ago

      - lower your expectations

      If you set your goal too high you will be sad all the time. Choose a goal that you would be happy with but make sure it's a realistic goal!

    • bananaflag 10 hours ago ago

      > good diet with no junk food, alcohol, drugs and stimulants

      How does one get rid of the excitement of the expectation of eating chips or drinking cola etc?

      • coffeefirst 10 hours ago ago

        You replace the thing you want to quit with a better thing.

        Try tea and seltzers, not because they’re healthy but because they’re interesting. There’s an infinite range of teas.

        And learning to cook changed my life. I get annoyed with almost all delivery now because I can do better.

        • bananaflag 9 hours ago ago

          I started drinking herbal teas some years ago, I heavily enjoy hibiscus and ginger because of their strong taste, to a lesser degree also cinnamon, licorice and peppermint, but most teas seem very bland.

      • joe_mamba 10 hours ago ago

        You stop buying them during your weekly grocery shopping.

      • celeritascelery 10 hours ago ago

        GLP-1

      • megaloblasto 10 hours ago ago

        It sounds like you're saying that low will power leads to depression.

      • gowld 9 hours ago ago

        You need to educate/brainwash yourself with operant conditioning that junk food makes you sick and good food makes you feel good.

        The problem with depression in particular, though, is that self-harm--seeking behaviors is also a symptom, so that brainwashing can backfire.

      • adrian_b 10 hours ago ago

        Hard?

    • goodpoint 10 hours ago ago

      AKA "just don't be depressed"

    • Fricken 9 hours ago ago

      One indicator that you might be falling in to depression is that you struggle to find the motivation to maintain those healthy practices.

    • jmye 9 hours ago ago

      > How to solve most cases of depression

      What absurdly thoughtless, shallow nonsense. What, specifically, is your background in depression research, that leads you to believe you've completed solved it for everyone? I'll wait. I'm sure it's fucking extensive.

    • 9 hours ago ago
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    • 10 hours ago ago
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    • basisword 9 hours ago ago

      Every time this comes up the comments are the same. Just don't eat crap, just go to the gym, just make sure you get good sleep. It shows a total lack of understanding of depression. Of course these things work - and if people weren't depressed they might be able to try and do them. But when you have severe depression you literally have zero motivation. None. You suddenly can't sleep. You can barely get yourself out of bed. That's why things like pills are useful because they can help you get to the point where you can take the steps necessary to get your life into a state where it's less conducive to depression.

      >> ultimately it becomes your responsibility to try fix them if you want your situation to improve, since nobody else will.

      No. This is why doctors and psychologists etc exist. Not everything is fixable by you. Sometimes you need help from other people and blaming the depressed person for being depressed is fucking idiotic.

    • tpoacher 9 hours ago ago

      How to solve most cases of paraplegia:

      - Regular long walks at the park - Climb stairs whenever possible instead of using the lift - Good foot care - Engage in social exercise like running clubs - Wear good quality footwear, suitable for the activity that you're engaged in.

      Of course, not all paraplegics can use their feet, but ultimately it becomes your responsibility to try to improve leg strength to the point of overcoming paraplegia, by doing the things that would have helped in improving leg strength, if only you could walk.

      /s

      (tbf, not fully disagreeing per se, and all analogies are flawed, but the above sarcasm is to point out that this model is overly simplistic. And it can lead to hidden but very real unconscious bias and discrimination once words like "responsibility" is thrown into the mix)

  • throw4847285 10 hours ago ago

    I've seen the exact same post on HN maybe a dozen times. The psychology of people posting this sort of advice is more interesting to me than the advice itself.

    • giglamesh 7 hours ago ago

      I hope this phenomenon is not limited to HN, but this is the only place I'm aware of where the comments are often more interesting and useful than the posts.

      • throw4847285 4 hours ago ago

        I'm addicted to HN comments in a way that's almost certainly bad for me. I skim the articles (if that) and then hop into the comments section to pontificate about whatever topic is marginally related to the article I didn't read. Maybe my attention span has entirely eroded, or maybe I lack an outlet for the never-ending torrent of racing thoughts that keeps me up at night. But either way, here we are.

  • gavinray 6 hours ago ago

    There's no money in telling people "You will feel better if you move around a little each day, and don't eat junk food."

    Plus, the grand of majority of people would rather NOT move around and continue to eat junk food regardless. Animals evolved to be lazy.

    • thefz 6 hours ago ago

      Waiting for the inevitable peak HN comment "we should distillate the chemicals released during exercise into a pill and give it to people so they don't need to move"

  • tpoacher 9 hours ago ago

    But only for "per protocol" analyses.

    "Intention to treat" analyses, now ... very different conclusions.

  • iammjm 10 hours ago ago

    lets get concrete with "Exercise": what is one unit of exercise? like exactly what type of movement, at what intensity and duration should be performed how frequently to be as effective as therapy? like should i run every day at 160bmp for 20 minutes? whats the minimum effective dose?

    • beezlebroxxxxxx 9 hours ago ago

      If you take a "brisk" 20 minute walk every day, you'll meet the recommended weekly amount of aerobic exercise for Americans. (I think people should do more.)

      The actual amount you need to exercise, or the intensity, is not very big. The good thing with exercise is also that once you make it a habit to walk, say, 20 minutes a day, then walking 25 minutes a day becomes pretty trivial, and so on.

      • dyauspitr 8 hours ago ago

        Anecdotally, when I’m depressed, a brisk walk does very little. I need to run to the point where I get the endorphins flowing and there is pain from the lactic acid buildup.

    • esquivalience 10 hours ago ago

      There are no units of exercise and no units of depression either.

      In my opinion the best measure of exercise is perceived effort. So while you're asking for objective answers, I think a lot of this is inherently subjective.

      The benchmark you're asking for is also ill-defined. For example: How frequently to be as effective as what type and what frequency of therapy?

    • duskdozer 9 hours ago ago

      However much exercise the smug person suggesting it as a depression cure gets.

    • arethuza 10 hours ago ago

      "what is one unit of exercise"

      Based on my own recent experience I would suggest the "dog".

  • butlike 8 hours ago ago

    Nothing says "I can finally conquer my fears and anything that comes up" like a little strength in your back pocket.

  • Eddy_Viscosity2 10 hours ago ago

    "Exercise has at least a "moderate impact" on symptoms "compared with no treatment or a control intervention,"

    I mean, yes, but we already knew this. So good that this is a finding that passes replication.

  • gowld 9 hours ago ago

    OP site is blogspam.

    Here's the paper: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41500513/

    It's a review/summary of existing research, not anything new.

    The fundamental problem with studying alternatives to therapy is that "being in a study" may be as effective as therapy! It's a structural placebo effect.

    For a depressed person, "Exercise guided by a researcher" is different from "trying to make myself exercise".

    > Authors' conclusions: Exercise may be moderately more effective than a control intervention for reducing symptoms of depression.

    > Exercise appears to be no more or less effective than psychological or pharmacological treatments, though this conclusion is based on a few small trials.

    > Long-term follow-up was rare.

    Nothing new:

    > The addition of 35 RCTs (at least 2526 participants) to this update has had very little effect on the estimate of the benefit of exercise on symptoms of depression.

  • hmmmmmmmmmmmmmm 10 hours ago ago

    Vague reports like these are how you get people who drag themselves by the feet to go to gym and sit on a machine or do a random set of jumping jacks on the sled track. Taking up a sport and making it part of your lifestyle will be much more beneficial than telling people to do "moderate level exercise" because most people don't even know what that means and will never enjoy it.

    If you actually get into a sport there will be second order effects such as better diet and possibly finding others with interest in such activities as you will invest more time into it.

  • dsm4ck 9 hours ago ago

    Show me a disease with multiple unreliable treatment methods and I'll show you a disease that is not well understood

  • sublinear 9 hours ago ago

    This might sound strange, but a trick that got me off my ass was doing housework. It started to spill over into the rest of my life...

    If I'm sweating already and warmed up, I might as well take a walk to cool down. If I'm already walking and a good song comes on, I might as well jog. If I'm feeling sore already, I might as well lift some weights to gain some strength. To boost this all, I might as well eat more protein. If moving around is kinda making me feel nauseous sometimes, it's probably a vitamin thing so I go for more veggies. Hey veggies are slowly replacing bread and other empty carbs! Then my nerd brain kicked in and developed an obsession with cooking.

    On the other end of this, I was doing more housework because I was inviting people over more often and otherwise working from home. The mess became harder to avoid. I think we all did a little of that because of the cultural shift in the first half of this decade. That also meant entertaining more which meant trying to put out better food.

    All the incentives aligned to break me out of a cycle of bad habits for long enough that I genuinely can't go back. My life is objectively way better and I know exactly how it got that way, so there's nothing intimidating about it anymore. The level of effort also went down as all the new habits were streamlined into a coherent lifestyle.

    At the risk of sounding condescending, I think most of this is really just a matter of growing up anyway (I entered my 30s during this time period). I just wanted to share how it happened to me.

  • _DeadFred_ 5 hours ago ago

    This is the worst thing about having long COVID (well other than no one believing it is a thing). I had worked for years working back to being fit, had gotten up to benching 245 for 3 sets of 10. Workouts kept helped keep me balanced. Now I can barely squat 100lbs 5 times. It's so frustrating. And no one believes it's real. Like I had the fortitude to spend years building back strength and then one day I just chose to stop.

  • BenFranklin100 9 hours ago ago

    Reistance training — moreso than cardiovascular exercise — can improve sleep quality and duration. Both have significant effects on daytime mood and cognition. A good exercise program incorporates both resistance and cardiovascular exercise.

    • wvh 6 hours ago ago

      It's important to keep cortisol low, and over-exercise can cause cortisol to spike – as does depression in general, hence the sleeping difficulties many depressed people experience. Likely that's why resistance training and HIIT are more helpful in this case as there is less built up of stress hormones.

      I've been diagnosed with moderate to severe depression, and I'm a trial runner and do CrossFit. It's a balancing act to find strength and feeling capable through sport without increasing insomnia and early waking, likely because of cortisol spikes.

      Sport does more for me than antidepressants, which have little effect than making me feel tired all the time. I've gone through a whole battery of them with little success and I've become quite critical of them. But I'm lucky to generally like sport and eat pretty healthily; I can imagine for others that can be an extra stressor they really don't need.

    • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

      Thanks this is new to me (I'm mostly a cardio guy), didnt' know there was any difference in sleep quality/duration between cardio and lifting. They both help sleep btw it just turns out according to recent research resistance training helps more. Both are need though for a healthy lifestyle and I think cardio is actually more accessible for most people; I'm gonna count brisk walking as cardio for most people and that's the most accessible type of excercise everyone but the extremely debilitated can do.

      • BenFranklin100 9 hours ago ago

        I don’t like anecdotal evidence, but for myself I was running regularly but still experiencing suboptimal sleep. I started resistance training again and my sleep immediately got better.

        • weatherlite 9 hours ago ago

          I'm down with that , resistance training is clearly good. Cardio is also clearly good (both groups had better sleep than the group that didn't do any cardio). People should just do something, even walking birskly. We should all simply try to move and/or lift things.

  • cindyllm 10 hours ago ago

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