Health
Study shows possibility to predict who would benefit from exercise and behavioral therapy – News-Medical.Net
Aerobic exercise clearly benefits young adults with major depression, and a Rutgers-led study suggests it may be possible to predict those who would benefit from behavioral therapy with exercise.

Reviewed by Emily Henderson, B.Sc.Aug 24 2020
Aerobic exercise clearly benefits young adults with major depression, and a Rutgers-led study suggests it may be possible to predict those who would benefit from behavioral therapy with exercise.
Our study needs to be replicated, but the precision medicine approach of predicting who may or may not benefit from exercise as an antidepressant is provocative. We also need to know whether exercise has a similar antidepressant effect in younger adolescen…
-
Noosa News16 hours ago
Mitch Power Quick Shear event gets men talking about mental health
-
General16 hours ago
Accused of Antisemitism: Herald Sun, Israel lobby v Dandenong Clr Rhonda Garad
-
General18 hours ago
Thailand punches above its weight in film creativity and cross-border appeal. Here’s why
-
General11 hours ago
AFL Round 18 live updates: Bulldogs vs Crows, Giants vs Cats, Tigers vs Bombers, Dockers vs Hawks — blog, scores and stats