Exercise helps protect children from stress: study

Chevy Chase, MD – Physical activity may help children manage stressful situations, finds a new study from the University of Helsinki in Finland.

Researchers studied 252 8-year-olds who wore an accelerometer to measure their physical activity, according to the study abstract. Stressful situations were induced by assigning arithmetic and story-telling tasks, and saliva samples were used to measure the level of cortisol, which is a hormone linked to stress, according to a press release from the Endocrine Society, which published the study.

Children who were the most active had the least change in cortisol levels when stress occurred, leading researchers to conclude that exercise helps regulate cortisol’s response to stressful situations.

The study was published online March 7 in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

- Digital Partners -

Next Webinar

Current Issue

What's Trending

From our Partners

Earn recertification points

Board of Certified Safety Professionals

Take a quiz about this issue of the magazine and earn recertification points from the Board of Certified Safety Professionals.