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‘Five-a-day’ activities to boost mental health

3:00pm GMT, Wednesday, 22 October 2008

Taking part in daily activities – such as gardening – can help protect mental health, according to a Government think tank. Taking part in daily activities – such as gardening – can help protect mental health, according to a Government think tank.

Undertaking activities such as gardening, playing a musical instrument or learning new skills could help to protect individuals’ mental health, a Government think tank has advised.

According to the report by Foresight, ‘five-a-day’ activities can be just as beneficial to mental health as eating five fruit and vegetables a day is to physical health.

The report is based on the findings of a two-year study by 400 international experts who work in a variety of specialisms varying from neuroscience to economics.

It calls for each area of society – from Government and companies through to individuals – to help people realise their mental potential at every stage of their lives. This will boost both mental capital and wellbeing and “could reap very high economic and social benefits in the future,” it said.

The study named five categories of things believed to make a profound difference to people’s wellbeing. These include: connecting with family, friends, colleagues and neighbours; being active with sports and hobbies; being curious about the world around you; learning something new; and giving to others you meet around you.

It also calls for early intervention for developing and maintaining mental capital and mental wellbeing – from spotting and treating learning difficulties in children and young people through to developing biomarkers [indications of a change in state] to diagnose dementia earlier in older people.

Professor John Beddington, the Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser and Director of the Foresight Programme, said: “There is good work being done but progress can be made and taxpayers money saved if government departments work together more effectively to tackle these issues.

“Investing to identify and tackle learning difficulties early on and improving the take up of education and learning will result in people getting better jobs. The report has shown that if an individual is fulfilled in their work this positively affects wellbeing, this in turn will see reduced expenditure on the treatment of mental health problems.”
 
According to the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS), mental-ill-health costs up to £77 billion a year in England alone. Treating dementia costs the UK £17bn a year – the figure is set to rise to £50bn a year within 30 years.

By Natasha Piscitelli

Comments:

 
A JaxN Says:

Missing in this article is any consideration of the practices used out in the real world against the modern workforce, i.e the open planned environment.

For example there’s workplace psychology and its use of subliminal coercion. This practice may well produce ‘economic’ results, but it also challenges the basis of truth and perception and thus creates confusion. Now add stress which is natural in any situation of learning and one is effectively programming the psyche of the workforce through habit, forcing ideas which are absorbed without any conscious thought.

The practitioners of this science might be trained to only see it as subliminal influence, but as I see it, this thing challenges truth and can only lead to the confusion we see evidenced in our rising statistics.

In my opinion such practices needs to be noticed and then legislated for. The irony is that complaints in this area are likely to be dismissed as due to mental illness.

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