Oftentimes I find medical research not interesting, most of the people that do strength training know the anxiolytic effect, there is no need for an nth paper to say it, there is a need for research that explain why it is true.
Meta-analysis help in showing trends, it's kinda valuable per se, but there are meta-analysis that show important things that were previously difficult to find because they were scattered in the literature, and the litterature was not with the same sample of people. Here the insights are pretty small, there was not really a doubt about the effect of strength training. A better analysis would be 'which people do not benefit for anxiolytic effects doing sport'. That's unknown, do these people even exist?
Science confirming "common knowledge" is still important not only to cement the common knowledge with supporting data but also to open avenues to find mechanisms, which also leads to your question:
> A better analysis would be 'which people do not benefit for anxiolytic effects doing sport'. That's unknown, do these people even exist?
If there was no scientific validation of the benefits this question wouldn't be able to be researched.
It's worth noting that this is a paper from 2014. The premise seems well-known now, but I wonder if it was as strong then?
I agree root cause analysis would be more interesting, but it wouldn't be justified until the base phenomena was validated.
Sure, people who do exercise think it helps stress and anxiety, but lots of people also find homeopathic remedies to be helpful. Papers like this show the former stand up under experimentation and the later don't.
xnx|1 year ago
aatd86|1 year ago
KevinMS|1 year ago
gdjskshh|1 year ago
I've never had a healthcare worker recommend it to me. Why not?
We should teach it in public schools.
somethingsome|1 year ago
Meta-analysis help in showing trends, it's kinda valuable per se, but there are meta-analysis that show important things that were previously difficult to find because they were scattered in the literature, and the litterature was not with the same sample of people. Here the insights are pretty small, there was not really a doubt about the effect of strength training. A better analysis would be 'which people do not benefit for anxiolytic effects doing sport'. That's unknown, do these people even exist?
piva00|1 year ago
> A better analysis would be 'which people do not benefit for anxiolytic effects doing sport'. That's unknown, do these people even exist?
If there was no scientific validation of the benefits this question wouldn't be able to be researched.
7bit|1 year ago
Many people also thought drinking bleach prevents Covid. Whatever people NK and feel, it is important to have it confirm scientifically.
bradreaves2|1 year ago
I agree root cause analysis would be more interesting, but it wouldn't be justified until the base phenomena was validated.
Sure, people who do exercise think it helps stress and anxiety, but lots of people also find homeopathic remedies to be helpful. Papers like this show the former stand up under experimentation and the later don't.