# Sleep, Physical Activity, and Mood Among People Seeking Mental Health Care

**Authors:** Aishani Kulshreshtha, Yu Fang, Elizabeth D. Mills, Amy S. B. Bohnert, Srijan Sen

PMC · DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2026.1194 · 2026-03-09

## TL;DR

The study shows that sleep and physical activity are linked to mood in mental health patients, with individual differences in optimal sleep duration and activity levels for better mood.

## Contribution

The study reveals bidirectional and individualized associations between sleep, physical activity, and mood in mental health care seekers.

## Key findings

- Optimal sleep duration for mood varies among individuals, with both shorter and longer durations linked to worse mood.
- Physical activity is positively associated with mood, but the effect diminishes at higher-than-usual activity levels.
- Mood influences subsequent sleep and physical activity in a wavelike pattern.

## Abstract

What is the association of sleep and physical activity with mood score in patients seeking mental health care?

This cohort study of 1476 patients seeking mental health care revealed dynamic, reciprocal associations between mood, physical activity, and sleep, as documented through actigraphy and daily mood diaries. Patients varied substantially in their optimal sleep duration for mood, with both shorter and longer sleep than a person’s optimal duration being significantly associated with worse subsequent mood.

These findings suggest that knowledge of individual sleep-mood and activity-mood patterns may help to develop more focused and personalized behavioral strategies to improve mental health and mood.

This cohort study investigates the associations between sleep, physical activity, and daily mood score in patients seeking mental health care.

Improving mental health through targeting behaviors like sleep and physical activity in treatment has been challenging, in part due to the challenge of measuring these factors in an accurate manner. Mobile technology can enable an understanding of the dynamic, complex associations between physical activity and sleep, but most prior mobile technology studies have had modest sample sizes and utilized cross-sectional, between-person designs, thus limiting their impact.

To investigate the within-person associations between sleep, physical activity, and daily mood among individuals receiving mental health treatment to inform health behavior recommendations.

This 12-month cohort study involved patients seeking mental health care at the University of Michigan academic medical center mental health care clinics. All participants were enrolled between May 13, 2020, and December 12, 2022. Data analysis was performed from September 2024 to June 2025.

Objective, wrist-based actigraphy measures of sleep (total sleep time, interrupted nighttime sleep, and napping) and physical activity (step count) were obtained.

The primary outcome was participant-reported daily mood score, on a scale of 1 (worst mood) to 10 (best mood). Linear mixed-effects models were used to estimate associations among sleep, physical activity, and mood scores.

A total of 1476 participants (mean [SD] age, 36.5 [14.2] years; 1062 [72.0%] female) were included in the analysis. Sleep duration was associated with subsequent mood through an inverse U-shaped relationship, with both short and long sleep duration associated with poorer mood (quadratic term b = 0.027; 95% CI, −0.031 to −0.023). Notably, patients varied substantially in their optimal sleep duration (mean [SD], 6.8 [1.9] hours) for peak mood. Physical activity was positively associated with subsequent mood (linear term b = 0.160; 95% CI, 0.149 to 0.162; P < .001; quadratic term b =− 0.022; 95% CI, −0.027 to −0.017; P < .001), with diminishing associations at higher than usual activity for that individual. Conversely, daily mood was associated with subsequent sleep (linear term b = −1.377; 95% CI, −1.877 to −0.877; P < .001; quadratic term b = −0.394; 95% CI, −0.765 to −0.023; P = .037) and step count (linear term b = 0.020; 95% CI, 0.003 to 0.030; P = .02; quadratic term b = −0.010; 95% CI, −0.020 to −0.001; P = .03) in a wavelike manner.

This cohort study of people seeking mental health care found complex, bidirectional associations between sleep, physical activity, and mood with individual variation in optimal sleep duration for mood scores. The findings advance progress toward effectively targeting health behaviors to improve mental health.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** interrupted sleep episode (OMIM:217095), depression (MESH:D003866), fragmented (MESH:D012892), mood (MESH:D019964), GAD-7 (MESH:C537955), anxiety symptoms (MESH:D001008), hypersomnia (MESH:D006970), Mental (MESH:D008607), Generalized Anxiety Disorder (MESH:C000726808), psychiatric (MESH:D001523), anxiety (MESH:D001007)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12973096/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12973096