A new study from the University of Ottawa’s Faculty of Medicine found patients with mental or physical illness were able to successfully adhere to exercise regimes despite previous thinking, resulting in decreased suicide attempts.
The findings cast doubt on the
misconception that patients suffering from mental or physical illness are not
motivated to participate in a physical exercise regime, which has similar
efficacy to antidepressants and cognitive behavioral therapy in the treatment
of depression. It’s effect on suicidal behaviors, however, was unclear.
“This misconception has led to primary
care providers under-prescribing exercise, resulting in further
deterioration of patients’ mental and physical health,” says Dr. Nicholas
Fabiano, a psychiatry resident and lead author of the study with medical student
Arnav Gupta.
“The findings of this study “debunk”
this belief as exercise was well tolerated in those with mental or physical
illness. Therefore, providers should not have apprehension about prescribing
exercise to these patients.”
Source: https://www.uottawa.ca/en/news-all/exercise-decreases-suicide-attempts-those-mental-physical-illness
Journal article: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0165032723002331?via%3Dihub
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