Elsevier

Preventive Medicine

Volume 28, Issue 1, January 1999, Pages 75-85
Preventive Medicine

Regular Article
Long-Term Effects of Aerobic Exercise on Psychological Outcomes,☆☆

https://doi.org/10.1006/pmed.1998.0385Get rights and content

Abstract

Background. Although the literature on increased physical fitness and psychological outcomes has grown large, a number of methodological limitations remain unaddressed. The present study was designed to address a number of these limitations while examining the short- and long-term psychological effects following completion of a 12-week aerobic fitness program using bicycle ergometry (and confirmed increases in fitness).

Method. Following completion of a 12-week aerobic fitness program (and through 12 months of follow-up), 82 adult participants completed the Beck Depression Inventory, Profile of Mood States, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, and the Tennessee Self-Concept Scale. Physiological measures used to assess changes in aerobic fitness were maximal work load, submaximal heart rate at a standard work load, predicted maximum oxygen uptake, and resting heart rate.

Results. Exercise participants experienced a positive fitness change and psychological improvement over the initial 12-week program compared to a control group. At 1 year follow-up, physiological and psychological benefits remained significantly improved from baseline.

Conclusions.Overall, results indicate that exercise-induced increases in aerobic fitness have beneficial short-term and long-term effects on psychological outcomes. We postulate that participants in the exercise group did not increase the amount of weekly exercise they performed over the 12-month follow-up period and thus the maintenance of the psychological improvements occurred concurrent with equal or lesser amounts of exercise.

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  • The authors thank Dr. A. William Fleming and Bally Fitness Products for providing the Lifecycles used in this study. Also, we thank Drs. David McDonald and Vanessa Selby for their help in conducting the study. We acknowledge and thank Greg Thackery, Dan Smith, Mark Volek, and Patti Ross for the work in administering the numerous exercise tests throughout the project. Finally, much appreciation goes to David Knipp and Linda Shipley for the preparation of the manuscript.

    ☆☆

    Matarazzo, J, DWeiss, S, MHerd, J, AMiller, N, EWeiss, S, W

    1

    To whom reprint requests should be addressed at Department of Psychology, 210 McAlester Hall, University of Missouri-Columbia, Columbia, MO 65211.

    2

    Present address: United HealthCare, Minnetonka, MN.

    3

    Present address: University of Michigan Medical Center, Ann Arbor, NI.

    4

    Present address: Humboldt-University, Berlin, Germany.

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