03/27/2026
Exercise can be as effective as meds or therapy for depression (and helps anxiety too)
A massive umbrella review pooling 1,000+ randomized trials (~80,000 people) found:
* Aerobic exercise (walking, running, cycling, swimming) produced moderate improvements in depression and meaningful benefits for anxiety.
* For depression, supervised, group-based exercise programs worked best.
* For anxiety, shorter, lower‑intensity exercise sessions often helped most.
* Benefits showed up across ages, with strongest effects in young adults (18–30) and postnatal women.
Why this matters: Exercise is low-cost, widely accessible, and improves sleep, energy, and metabolic health, making it a strong first‑line option or add‑on to care.
How to start (and stick with it):
* Pick what you’ll actually do: brisk walks, swim, cycle, dance, yoga, strength.
* Aim for most days: even 10–20 minutes counts.
* Try group or supervised exercise programs for mood support.
* Pair with sunlight, a walking buddy, or a class for accountability and social connection.
* Coordinate with your clinician if you’re on medication or in therapy, think “both/and,” not “either/or.”
Source: Medscape summary of umbrella review in British Journal of Sports Medicine (Feb 10, 2026): Exercise Comparable to Antidepressants, Talk Tx for Depression?
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/exercise-and-lifestyle-help-manage-ankylosing-spondylitis-2026a10007qr