Dance like Your Doctor Is Watching: It's Great for Your Mind and Body
Are you one of those who are
a great dancer now and is looking for reasons to continue dancing till you grow
old? Yes you should.
Two new studies say that
dancing may keep you healthy well into old age, potentially by reducing
the risk of disability and dementia.
One paper,
published in the Scandinavian Journal of Medicine &
Science in Sports, looked at how various forms of physical activity
affected about 1,000 elderly Japanese women and their risk of becoming
physically disabled, as measured by their ability to complete tasks like
walking, bathing and dressing. The women were asked about their general health
and the types of physical activity they regularly did, and were monitored for
signs of disability over eight years.
During that time, 130 women met the criteria for disability. The
researchers found that physical activity generally helped women remain
independent as they aged, but certain types of exercise seemed to have larger
effects than others — and dancing led the pack.
The researchers found that women who frequently danced had a 73% lower
chance of becoming disabled during the study period, compared to women who did
not. None of the other exercises, including calisthenics, walking and yoga, had
such a strong association after adjusting for demographic and health factors.
The secret may be that
dancing requires a variety of different skills, both mental and physical.
“Dancing requires not only balance, strength, and endurance ability, but also
cognitive ability: adaptability and concentration to move according to the
music and partner, artistry for graceful and fluid motion, and memory for
choreography,” the researchers write.
The second paper,
published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics
Society, further examined dancing’s mental health benefits. The
researchers analyzed 32 past studies involving more than 3,500 people ages 50
to 85 to determine whether mind-body activities, including tai chi, yoga
and dance, could improve aging adults’ cognitive function.
There is no known way to definitively prevent or reverse dementia
and cognitive decline. But after reviewing all the data, the researchers
determined that aging adults who engaged in mind-body exercises tended to have
stronger global cognition (a measure of general cognitive function) than people
who did not do any.
And when the researchers refined their analysis to look at specific
mind-body activities and measures of cognitive function, they found even
stronger evidence that 60 to 120 minutes of tai chi or dance per week could
improve global cognition, even for adults who already had some impairment.
These activities also appeared to positively affect cognitive flexibility — the
ability to adapt to new and changing situations — language fluency, learning,
memory and organization, even more than other mind-body pursuits.
Neither study proved that dancing causes health benefits, only that it is
associated with these outcomes. It’s possible, for example, that physically and
mentally healthy adults are simply more likely to dance than people who aren’t
as healthy.
Still, these studies are not the first to suggest that dancing comes
with health benefits. One paper published
in 2017 found through brain imaging scans that dancing can increase the amount
of white matter in the brains of elderly adults. White matter degrades with
age, and this breakdown is thought to be associated with cognitive decline.
Of course, dancing is also a good form of physical exercise, which plenty of research has shown to benefit
mood, mental health and physical health — and it doesn’t hurt that it’s just
great fun. Get involved into the dance
community and take dance classes NOW.
CONTACT TO REGISTER FOR A DANCE CLASS TODAY AT atehcarine8116@gmail.com
Comments
Post a Comment