Tai Chi Helps Fight Depression Gentle Exercise Movement Meditation
Tai Chi Helps Fight Depression, Gentle Exercise, Movement Meditation
Patients who regularly performed tai chi while taking a were more likely to , compared with a group who just attended health lectures while taking the drug, researchers found. Ryan McVay/Photolibrary Tai Chi can be seen as a complementary treatment for depression. Tai chi is known to , but the study published in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry was the first to examine whether it helps with depression, says Helen Lavretsky, M.D., a professor of psychiatry at UCLA. She and her team studied 73 people age 60 and older with major depression who had seen only partial remission of their symptoms while taking the antidepressant drug escitalopram (Lexapro). They were randomly assigned to a health education program or to classes in tai chi chih, a simplified version of traditional tai chi. Each group met once a week for two hours over 10 weeks and were asked to perform daily exercises at home. While depression symptoms were alleviated in both groups, 65 percent of those in the tai chi class achieved remission, but the same was true for only 51 percent of the health education class.
Use Tai Chi to Fight Depression
Gentle exercise has powerful effect in older people
Older adults who suffer from depression may find lasting relief by practicing a flowing Chinese martial art called in addition to receiving more traditional treatment, according to a new study.Patients who regularly performed tai chi while taking a were more likely to , compared with a group who just attended health lectures while taking the drug, researchers found. Ryan McVay/Photolibrary Tai Chi can be seen as a complementary treatment for depression. Tai chi is known to , but the study published in the American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry was the first to examine whether it helps with depression, says Helen Lavretsky, M.D., a professor of psychiatry at UCLA. She and her team studied 73 people age 60 and older with major depression who had seen only partial remission of their symptoms while taking the antidepressant drug escitalopram (Lexapro). They were randomly assigned to a health education program or to classes in tai chi chih, a simplified version of traditional tai chi. Each group met once a week for two hours over 10 weeks and were asked to perform daily exercises at home. While depression symptoms were alleviated in both groups, 65 percent of those in the tai chi class achieved remission, but the same was true for only 51 percent of the health education class.