The effects of a 12-week moderate-intensity continuous training intervention on depression, anxiety, and stress in sedentary female college students: a focus on negative emotion regulation
Quanwen Zeng, Yong Zhang, Huimin Li, Jin Yuan, Dan Feng, Gendi Zhu

TL;DR
A 12-week exercise program helped reduce mild and severe depression and anxiety in sedentary female college students, but not in those with moderate symptoms.
Contribution
The study explores MICT's effects on varying levels of negative mood states in sedentary female college students.
Findings
MICT improved mild and severe depressive mood in sedentary female college students.
MICT had no significant effect on moderate depressive mood or severe anxiety.
The study highlights the need for better control designs to assess MICT's mental health impact.
Abstract
Moderate Intensity Continuous Training (MICT) is recognized as an effective intervention for improving negative affect. However, research on its effects across varying levels of negative mood states in sedentary female college students remains limited. This study aimed to investigate the impact of a 12-week MICT intervention on different levels of negative mood in sedentary female college students. A total of 144 participants were randomly assigned to two groups, each consisting of 72 individuals. The participants were further categorized into three negative mood groups: depression, anxiety, and stress, with 24 participants in each group. Within each mood group, participants were divided into three subgroups based on the severity of their mood (mild, moderate, and severe), with 8 participants in each subgroup. The experiment spanned 12 weeks, with two 45-min training sessions per week.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Behavioral Health and Interventions · Mental Health Research Topics
