Intentional Recreational Activities of Daily Living and Well‐Being in the General Population and in Psychosomatic Patients, Before and After Treatment
Michael Linden, Christopher Arnold, Barbara Lieberei, Matthias Rose, Beate Muschalla

TL;DR
This study explores how intentional recreational activities improve well-being in the general population and psychosomatic patients before and after treatment.
Contribution
The study introduces the concept of intentional recreational activities of daily living (IRADL) as a tool for improving psychological well-being.
Findings
Over half of the general population and most psychosomatic patients use recreational activities to improve well-being.
Psychosomatic treatment increases motivation to use recreational activities for well-being.
Post-treatment psychosomatic patients showed a high rate of intentional recreational activity use.
Abstract
Mental illness can affect activities of daily living, instrumental activities of daily living, and recreational activities of daily living (RADL, e.g., sports, hobbies). RADL can have positive effects on psychological well‐being, and can therefore also intentionally be used to improve one's well‐being (IRADL, intentional recreational activities of daily living). In a German representative and a convenience sample, 2522 participants and 213 patients were asked about their use of IRADL. The psychosomatic patients were asked pre and post a 5‐week stay in a psychosomatic hospital. More than half of the participants in the representative study, 2/3 of the pretreatment, and over 91% of the posttreatment psychosomatic sample indicated at least one recreational activity that they use to deliberately improve psychological well‐being. Most people in the general public use recreational activities…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPhysical Activity and Health · Recreation, Leisure, Wilderness Management · Occupational Therapy Practice and Research
