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Umbrella Review Finds Exercise Cuts Depression and Anxiety Symptoms

Clinicians are urged to translate the evidence into tailored programs despite quality concerns in source reviews.

Overview

  • Published in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, the synthesis pooled 57 depression meta-analyses (800 studies; 57,930 participants) and 24 for anxiety (258 studies; 19,368 participants), reporting standardized mean differences of -0.61 for depression and -0.47 for anxiety.
  • Aerobic activities such as running, walking, swimming, and dancing showed the largest effects; supervised and group formats were most effective for depression, while shorter, lower-intensity programs were most associated with anxiety relief.
  • The strongest improvements were observed in adults aged 18–30 and in postnatal women, with beneficial effects seen across other age groups as well.
  • Effect sizes compared favorably with those reported in prior reviews for antidepressants and psychotherapies, spurring calls to integrate tailored exercise prescriptions into routine care and public-health guidance.
  • Authors and experts flagged limits including low or critically low AMSTAR-2 ratings for many source reviews, heterogeneous definitions of intensity and duration, and sparse anxiety data for some populations, highlighting the need for higher-quality, longer-term, head-to-head research.