Boost your mental health this winter with these tips
As the short days and long nights of winter progress, our body and mind can be more susceptible to increased stress responses and even seasonal depression. Here are some suggestions on ways to boost your mental health and thrive this winter.
As the short days and long nights of winter progress, our body and mind can be more susceptible to increased stress responses and even seasonal depression. So it’s important to take care of yourself; not only physically, but mentally this season. That’s easier said than done, but taking the following tips into consideration can help boost your mental health this winter.
Enjoy the outdoors when you can
You’d be amazed how spending some time outdoors each day can help mentally. Mental health self-care is especially important this time of year when the days are often gloomy. Take advantage of sunny days by going outside—bundle up and brave the cold if need be. Going for a walk every morning can drastically reduce stress and change your mood overall.
If there’s snow nearby, many people take on winter activities like skiing, snowboarding, and snowshoeing—all of which are great ways to increase your daily exercise and improve your mental health. Consider joining a club that meets weekly for outdoor activities to help motivate you to get outside and move.
Have you heard of the healing power of nature? It’s real. Research shows immersing yourself in nature gives both short and long-term mental health benefits. Make going outside a daily priority and you’ll feel improvements in your mood in no time.
Create a safe space
When you’re done enjoying the outdoors, it’s nice to come home to a cozy spot to relax. Having a safe space in your home, somewhere away from other people, noises, and distractions can be great for your well-being.
Consider creating a calm space for yourself in a spare room you may have, or make a corner of a room your own. If you own your home, you might evaluate whether you’d like to do a renovation to add more space. Although renovations are pricey, you may be able to use your home’s equity to fund a project like this.
Fill your new safe space with things you enjoy. Print your favorite pictures, write positive affirmations and hang them on the wall, add plants, and make a cozy spot to sit. If you enjoy reading you might create a small reading nook, or make space for a yoga mat where you can meditate or stretch. Once your calm space is finished, sit back, relax, and enjoy the positive effects on your mental well-being.
Spend time with friends and family
Humans rely on social support to be fulfilled. Leaning on your friends and family can even provide health benefits. Prioritize seeing friends or family you enjoy being around—you’ll find it has a positive impact on your life.
Lean on loved ones to help talk through challenges or support with daily tasks that may be hard for just one person to handle. Have a puzzle or game night, or just plan to run errands together.
While not everyone has a close relationship with their family, good friends can fill the same role. Surround yourself with friends that you can both have fun with and rely on—and who make positive life choices you respect. Friends like this can motivate you to do the same.
Prioritize exercise
Just like going outdoors, prioritizing exercise can positively boost your mental health. If you don’t love the idea of going outdoors every day, try to push yourself to do some sort of exercise indoors every day. The more you move your body the better you will feel mentally.
You don’t need a home gym to exercise inside. Yoga is a great way to get your workout in and it offers many health benefits—both physical and mental. Yoga can help alleviate stress, improve balance, and boost sleep quality. If you suffer from anxiety or depression, yoga is a great way to ease the weight of both.
If yoga isn’t your style, you can do other at-home exercises. Try following a YouTube workout video, walking up and down stairs, or lifting dumbbell weights in your living room. Pushing yourself to do any form of exercise will have a positive effect on your mind.
Final thoughts
These are just a few of the many ways you can support your mental well-being. Put a few to the test and see what works best for you this season. Winter can be a great time to reset, but it may also bring extra challenges and stressors—like the holidays or the marathon of short, cold days. Check in on yourself and make a plan to support your mental well-being to thrive all the way to spring.
Managing emotional wellness during the holidays
The holidays are a time for joy—but they can also include stress. Learn tips to support your emotional wellness so you can better cope with any challenges, better show up for yourself and your loved ones, and enjoy the holiday season.
As the holidays begin, families and friends come together to celebrate. There’s much to be grateful for during this time, but the holidays can also bring up feelings of stress for many people.
An important way to take care of yourself is to manage emotional wellness—not only to improve your overall health but to help you better enjoy the end of year festivities.
Today we’ll answer:
- What’s emotional wellness?
- And how can you manage it?
What is emotional wellness?
Emotional wellness is a person’s ability to manage emotions and handle life challenges.
When emotional wellness suffers, your relationships, mental health, and ability to do day-to-day activities can also suffer.
Struggling to maintain emotional wellness may even impact physical health, with issues that can look like the classic effects of stress—including high blood pressure and digestive issues.
Managing emotions, handling life’s stresses, and coping with difficulties in a healthy way—especially during potentially stressful times like the holidays—is a powerful tool for better overall health.
6 tips to help manage emotional wellness during the holidays
Exercise
Evidence suggests physically active people have lower rates of depression and anxiety than people who don’t exercise frequently.
This could be for a variety of reasons—though recent research suggests regular exercise has an “antidepressive effect.”
How does it work?
According to John Hopkins Medicine, it blunts the brain's response to emotional and physical stress.
Physical activities like walking, biking, or even dancing can help:
- Improve sleep
- Increase energy levels
- Reduce feelings of stress
- Enhance mood and emotional well-being
If you have time, try to go for walks or runs during the holidays to help blow off some steam and improve your mood. It’s a healthy habit that can support your well-being well after the holidays are over too.
Socialize
The holidays are a great time to socialize as family and friends get together.
Socializing can help:
- Improve feelings of loneliness
- Sharpen memory and cognitive skills
- Increase happiness and well-being
Sometimes social gatherings and responsibilities can challenge our emotional well-being. But seeking positive social connection—whether with romantic partners, friends, family, or neighbors—can have a healthy impact on emotional well-being.
Reduce stress
While characterized as a time of joy and cheer, the holidays bring increased stress for many people. You may have to plan family gatherings, buy gifts, or travel during some of the busiest travel days of the year.
Here are a few tips to help reduce stress during the holidays:
- Plan ahead. Set aside time, or even days dedicated to cooking, packing for travel, or shopping.
- Consider minimizing or eliminating gift giving with your family or friend group. Instead of swapping presents, many people choose to donate to charities, share food, write letters, or plan an activity or outing together.
- Stick to a budget. Decide how much money you’d like to, and can afford to, spend before you shop.
- Keep up with healthy habits. Do your best to stay physically active, get enough sleep, and take time for yourself for relaxing practices and hobbies of your own.
Get your sleep
Poor sleep can decrease positive emotions and increase negative emotional responses to stressors.
To improve sleep during the holidays, do your best to:
- Exercise daily
- Avoid naps close to bedtime
- Avoid electronics, alcohol, and big meals before bedtime
- Sleep in a dark, quiet, and comfortable sleeping environment
- Keep a routine—go to bed at the same time every night
Practice mindfulness
Developing mindfulness practices can help you face stressful situations with more ease. Practicing mindfulness is about allowing yourself to be fully present—and not operating on autopilot, in a reactionary state.
Two common mindfulness techniques include:
- Deep breathing, which can help supply more oxygen to the brain and stimulate the parasympathetic nervous system—promoting a sense of calmness.
- Body scans may also help you cope with challenges and stress. In one study, researchers found participants had reduced levels of stress after doing a body scan meditation. Body scans can be done in as little as five minutes and consist of being still and focusing on how various parts of your body feel, while breathing deeply and relaxing each body part.
Going for a stroll on your own can also be a great moment to practice mindfulness while getting exercise too.
Spend time with your hobbies
A hobby is any activity done regularly for leisure and enjoyment—like writing or painting, gardening, or athletic activities like sports or working out.
Your hobbies are unique to you. Spending time on them can help:
- Reduce stress. One study showed cortisol (the stress hormone) dropped by 75% after participants made art.
- Enhance well-being. In another study, researchers found people experienced a better mood after spending the day doing creative activities.
Conclusion
It’s important to take time for your emotional wellness during the holidays—it allows you to show up better for yourself, your relationships, and daily activities.
Whether it’s exercise, getting enough sleep, or spending time on a hobby—there are plenty of ways to take control of your emotional wellness.
We hope you learned something new to make the holiday season a little more joyful.
Happy holidays!
Stress Awareness Month
Now is the perfect time to learn about stress and the impacts it can have on us physically and mentally. Being aware of stress, and what may be causing it, is a great first step to improving mental health.
April is National Stress Awareness Month, and with everything that’s happened over the past few years, it’s no surprise that stress and mental health concerns are at an all-time high.
That’s why now is the perfect time to learn about stress and the impacts it can have on us physically and mentally. Being aware of stress, and what may be causing it, is a great first step to improving mental health. Try to think about what stress means to you and how you can apply some of these tips to your everyday life.
What are Stressors?
Stressors are anything that causes the mental or physical tension and strain we sometimes experience. Stressors are often life events or situations that bring about dramatic change. Despite the stigma around stress, small amounts of stress can actually be beneficial as it can be a daily motivating factor. On the other hand, an excess of stress can be detrimental not only to our physical health, but to our mental well-being too.
Work Stress
No matter your scope of involvement in the workforce, you’re bound to feel occupational stress at one point or another. Occupational stress can arise for a variety of different reasons, most commonly job insecurity, work overload, lack of leadership, conflicts, and general dissatisfaction. In today’s age, many people put their career before their personal lives, which can result in negative implications for their lives outside of work. Focusing on keeping a healthy work-life balance is key to feeling fulfilled and avoiding excessive stress in your career.
Financial Stress
We’ve all heard that “money can’t buy happiness”, but in reality, a less-than-ideal financial situation is more likely to cause stress in our lives.
Some common financial issues that affect many of us include:
- Unemployment or underemployment
- Debt
- Poor spending habits
- Financial emergencies
Addressing these stressors can help improve and fortify your financial health moving forward. Some common ways to help manage financial stress are:
- Comprehensive Budgeting - Creating a timely budget can help with overspending, thus reducing stress due to monthly monetary concerns. While monthly budgeting may be the most common, taking things a step further and creating weekly or even daily budgets can be a great financial resource. The most important aspect of budgeting is adherence. The use of a budgeting app is a great way to hold yourself accountable.
- Debt Consolidation - Some individuals who are burdened with debt and overwhelmed at the thought of how to pay it off, find it useful to consolidate by using a special loan for debt consolidation. This can help make repayment terms easier while providing immediate funds to pay off existing debts. For some, the benefits of consolidation, like lower interest rates and single installments each month, create much less of a headache when it comes time to pay.
- Automate Your Savings - Setting up automatic deposits into a savings account can help ease the stress of remembering on your own and help to further your savings goals. Having a savings account can help you be better prepared for financial emergencies. Accounts with high interest and low or zero monthly fees are a great way to grow your savings and mitigate financial stress.
Although they may seem insignificant, a few minor changes to spending habits and the way we think about money can go a long way towards decreasing the stress and anxiety many of us feel on a regular basis.
Relationship Stress
Work and financial stress aside, there are a number of other factors that can have us feeling anxious or overwhelmed in life. Stress stemming from relationships is one of the most common. Whether it’s personal conflicts, challenges in our relationships, or the social anxiety that can come from social media use, it’s important to be aware of the stress we experience as a result of our relationships.
Romantic, familial, work, and friend relationships are all prone to stressors that can negatively impact our connection to one another. Differences in communication styles, life aspirations and levels of attachment, along with unmet expectations have the ability to create unwanted divides. Without proper communication, it can be difficult for us to understand one another and support each other’s needs.
In many situations, talking to one another is enough to alleviate stress. But in some cases, outside help in the form of therapy may be needed.
Stress & Your Mental Health
Understanding stress and the impacts it has on our mental health is extremely important. Each of us handles stress differently. So it’s important to recognize what works for you and to reach out for help when you need it.
Stress & Your Physical Health
The physical effects of stress can include low energy, insomnia, a weakened immune system, overeating, a loss of libido, digestion problems, and memory defects. Chronic stress, which occurs from extended periods of intense stress, can have significantly adverse effects on health. Untreated chronic stress can result in raised blood pressure, fertility issues, respiratory issues and an increased risk of heart attack and stroke. Keeping stress levels low is a great way to promote a healthy mind and body.
How Stress Awareness Month Can Help
Stress awareness is important, not just in April, but all year long. Take time each month to check in with yourself mentally. Here are some best practices you may find useful in your stress reduction journey.
Exercise & Diet
One of the simplest changes you can make to better your mental wellness is to optimize your healthy eating and exercise habits. A clean, balanced diet has been shown to improve the ability to cope with stress. The same goes for exercise, which results in the body’s release of endorphins - natural chemicals that improve mood and mental state. While it may take some time to adjust, incorporating a healthy diet and small amounts of exercise can help improve your overall health while also reducing stress levels. Something as simple as using a workout app can help get you into the habit of exercising and eating healthy!
Take Time With Yourself
It’s okay to say no sometimes. Rather than concern yourself with the demands and expectations of others, try to take stock of your own desires and wants. Think about how you want to spend your time and energy compared to how you’re currently spending it. Taking a step back can show you just how much you have on your plate. Making self care a priority and practicing mindfulness in your personal life can be exceptionally valuable and reaffirm your sense of purpose.
Consider Your Support Options
It’s long overdue that we eradicate the stigma around seeking help when we’re not feeling ourselves. Seeking help is a great way to learn to cope with the stress and anxiety that we face every day. Although simply talking to anyone can help, it can be uncomfortable to discuss some feelings with family or friends. Talking to a professional removes this aspect altogether and can greatly improve your mental state.
Sadly, there’s no foolproof cure for stress. But we can all take steps to improve and maintain our mental health and actively monitor stressors. These small steps can make a huge impact on our day to day wellbeing.
Mental Health and Income: Supporting Ourselves Through Financial Stress
Financial stress can have a major impact on our mental health. We asked our members how they felt about the connection between financial stress and mental health. Find out what they had to say.
Winter can be an especially trying time for people. The days are darker, the weather is colder, and as the holidays transition into tax season, money stressors can creep in. While money isn’t everything, it can certainly impact our mental health and well being.
We asked our members about their relationship with financial stress and mental wellness, and an astounding 123,800 answered us in just a month’s time.
Grounded in principles of the social determinants of health, our findings demonstrate the role our financial wellness has played in our wellbeing all along: When financial stress is high, mental health wellness can be low.
Our findings also highlight how the structural barriers that create income inequities are the same ones that make mental and physical well being harder to reach for people with lower incomes.
While not all of these systems can change overnight, it’s important to understand what is within our control to support ourselves through financial stress.
Here’s what we heard from our members
Anxiety and stress: All respondents reported feeling some level of anxiety and stress about their personal finances, but these feelings were experienced more severely in groups living with lower incomes (below $35,000 per year).
Basic needs: The ability to meet basic needs was directly correlated with income. People living with lower incomes were less likely to be able to meet their needs, and more than 60% of respondents said their access to medical care had been limited in the last year.
Mental vs. physical health: Compared to areas like physical health, participants reported lower feelings of wellness in their relationships and in their mental health. This was felt particularly strongly among those living with lower incomes.
How people’s lives were most impacted by anxiety and depression: Tiredness and trouble sleeping were more commonly reported than any other symptoms of depression. Anxiety manifested most as restlessness, feeling afraid, and uncontrollable worry.
What we can do in the face of inequities
Shedding light on where inequities lie can help us be mindful of where our greatest needs are as a community and foster greater support.
We know that many of these inequities are centuries in the making, and while these systems might be outside of our personal control, there are things we can do to foster our own financial wellness and nurture our mental health along the way.
As we begin the new year, there are things we can do to care for our mental health and financial wellness to set us up for a healthier and happier 2022.
Support is available.
SAMHSA’s National Helpline (1-800-662-HELP) is a free, confidential, 24/7, 365-day-a-year treatment referral and information service (in English and Spanish) for people facing mental and/or substance use disorders.
The CDC offers free and confidential resources to help people connect with a skilled, trained mental health professional.
Monitor your health behaviors and earn cash
Using the Evidation app can help you engage and monitor your health in a new way. Because we believe that you should be paid for data that you share, our app supports the mindful monitoring of health experiences and activities, with the added bonus of financial reward.
Emotional Wellness Month
Emotional Wellness is a critical part of your overall health and wellbeing. In fact, studies show that feeling well supported emotionally and socially can help prevent illness and early mortality and help recovery from injury or illness.
Most people think being healthy is all about exercising and eating right. But did you know that your emotions and paying attention to how you feel are all important parts of being healthy?
It's true!
Emotional Wellness is a critical part of your overall health and wellbeing. In fact, studies show that feeling well supported emotionally and socially can help prevent illness and early mortality and help recovery from injury or illness.
What is Emotional Wellness?
According to the National Institutes of Health, emotional wellness (or emotional wellbeing) is your ability to handle stress and sudden changes in life.
And the National Center for Emotional Wellness defines it as,
“an awareness, understanding and acceptance of our feelings, and our ability to manage effectively through challenges and change.”
Some of the signs of emotional wellness from the University of New Hampshire include:
- Sharing your feelings with others
- Saying "no" without feeling guilty
- Being able to relax
- Feeling happy with life
- Having friends and family that support you
Why is Emotional Wellness Important?
According to the Earl E. Bakken Center for Spirituality and Healing at the University of Minnesota, it's important for people to let go of negative emotions and begin a path toward healing and emotional wellbeing.
Over time, feelings that are left unresolved, such as anger and resentment, impact the chemical balance in our brains, depleting feel-good hormones and releasing stress hormones such as adrenaline. These hormones cause chronic stress that according to the University of Minnesota, can cause premature aging, high blood pressure, and even cardiovascular disease and digestive issues.
The CDC also says stress can cause:
- Headaches
- Body pain
- Chronic health problems
- Trouble sleeping
- Trouble focusing
- Anger
- Sadness
- Frustration
Ultimately, emotional wellness is part of our total wellbeing. Regardless of how healthy we are physically, how well we eat, how much we work out...if we aren’t well emotionally, we are more susceptible to a variety of problems and illnesses.
How Can I Improve Emotional Wellbeing?
The good news is that everyone can learn to handle stress and improve their emotional well-being. It all starts with paying better attention to your emotions, focusing on self-care, and putting yourself first!
The NIH has come up with ways to help people improve their emotional wellness, including:
- Reducing stress
- Getting better sleep
- Having a positive outlook on life
- Practicing mindfulness
- Reaching out to friends and family
- Getting help when you lose a loved one
Although these are some great ways for people to improve their emotional wellness, everyone is different and can have their own ways of dealing with stress and improving their emotional wellbeing.
Maybe you like to write poetry, or make art, or play loud music on your drums to let loose! Maybe you like spending time alone to unwind instead of with family.
What’s important is that you find what's right for you and know that it's okay to take time for yourself.
Gaining emotional wellness is a process that takes time to get right!
So don't feel discouraged if you still feel yourself getting stressed. It's normal, and overtime you'll learn what works best for you to decompress.
By improving emotional wellness, you can be able to better handle problems in life and gain what is known as "resilience." Resilience, according to the NIH, is our ability to have less negative emotions and bounce back when life gets rough.
How Does Emotional Wellness Month Help?
Mental health is health, and while technically October is Emotional Wellness Month, you can help shed light on the importance of having a strong emotional wellbeing all year long.
Some ideas to help include:
1. Participate in online forums or emotional support groups. You can provide support to someone who is struggling or find support for yourself or a loved one.
2. Host your own mindfulness groups, such as yoga or meditation classes with your friends or family. You can hold them at your local park when it’s nice out to get some fresh air at the same time. It's free, easy to do, and can let you spread positivity while increasing emotional wellness.
3. Share social media posts on emotional wellness from sites such as the NIH, or make your own newsletters or blogs to educate others on emotional wellness.
4. Get out there and laugh, enjoy time with others or alone.
5. Start journaling or take time to seek therapy and get in tune with your emotions. There's no better time than now to explore and work on your inner self!
Whatever you decide to do, take time to practice self-care and do anything that makes you happy and helps you get in tune with your emotions!
Whether that's taking a walk or a bath, anything helps.
It also helps to join the conversation and reach out to your family and friends who might also be struggling with their own emotional wellbeing. By reaching out, offering support, and raising awareness on mental and emotional health, you can make a difference in the lives of friends and loved ones!
Suicide Prevention Awareness Month
Every September individuals, communities, advocates, and organizations work to raise awareness and prevent suicide.
#SPM21 #BeThere #BeThe1To
“We can all help prevent suicide.”
Every September individuals, communities, advocates, and organizations work to raise awareness and prevent suicide. Suicide Prevention Awareness Month, National Suicide Prevention Awareness Week, and World Suicide Prevention Day all take place during September.
This years’ mission — change the conversation from suicide to suicide prevention.
Now, more than ever, people recognize the need to make suicide prevention a priority and are even ready to talk about their own mental health more openly. According to a 2020 national poll, the results
“underscore the importance of equipping all Americans with the tools and resources needed to feel empowered to have conversations about mental health and suicide prevention, and to take steps to care for their own mental health.”
What can you do to help?
As one of the leading causes of death, suicide affects everyone. And many of us struggle to know how we can help or feel like there is nothing we can do when someone we know is struggling.
But each of us can make a difference.
And there are so many resources and tools available to help.
With changes in the way we think and talk about mental health and suicide prevention, more and more people are sharing their experiences and reaching out. The pandemic and the toll it has taken on individuals has highlighted the need for resources and support. Especially for individuals who are most at risk.
This year, several advocacy groups and organizations have partnered to spread the message. Their goal is to raise awareness and help each of us learn how to find support or support someone who is struggling.
Resources
Asking for support if you are struggling is difficult. And supporting someone who is struggling can be just as hard.
If you or someone you know is struggling with thoughts of suicide, please reach out. Below is a list of resources for anyone thinking about suicide or struggling with mental health.
Resources
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline
1–800–273-TALK (8255)
Lifeline for Attempt Survivors
Lifeline for Disaster Survivors
National Alliance on Mental Health
Stories of Hope and Recovery: A Video Guide for Suicide Attempt Survivors | SAMHSA
Suicide Safe Mobile App | SAMHSA
The Trevor Project or Call 1–866–488–7386 or online instant messaging
SAGE LGBT Elder Hotline or Call 1–877–360-LGBT (5428)
Trans Lifeline or call 1–877–565–8860 (US) 1–877–330–6366 (Canada)
Suicide Prevention and Care, Indian Health Service
Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium
Resources for Veterans
Veteran Crisis Line Call 1–800–273–8255 and Press 1
VA Mental Health Suicide Prevention
Resources for Youth
#chatsafe: A Young Person’s Guide for Communicating Safely Online About Suicide (PDF | 6.7 MB)
Resources for Supporting Others
Help a Friend in Need: A Facebook and Instagram Guide (PDF | 524 KB)
https://www.wernative.org/articles/when-your-friend-is-talking-about-suicide
Why is Mental Health Self Care So Important?
Studies show that mental health is just as important as physical health. And little things like taking time for self care can make a huge impact. check out these tips for working mental health into your daily routine.
Why is Mental Health Self Care So Important?
The importance of mental health self care
We all know the importance of taking care of our bodies. When we neglect them, we become ill. Eating right, getting adequate rest and exercise, managing any chronic conditions — these are critical to maintaining good physical health.
But what about mental health?
Studies show that mental health is just as important as physical health. And little things like taking time for self care can make a huge impact.
So why do so many of us neglect this aspect of our wellbeing?
We asked Achievement users how often they made time for mental health self care, what types of activities they typically did, and what keeps them from practicing self care as often as they’d like.
What did we learn? That while many of our users do practice regular self care, the majority of them don’t do it as often as they’d like.
Why?
The most common responses (in order) were:
- Not enough time
- Pressures of daily life
- Financial burdens
We also discovered that while many of those who responded said that self care was very important to them (almost 75%), and almost 70% said they would like to practice self care daily, only 27% do.
So, in honor of Mental Health Awareness Month, we’d like to share some quick, easy, free ways to practice regular mental health self care!
10 tips for working mental health self care into your daily routine
- Take a quick (5–10 minute) walk or bike ride
- Download a free meditation app — most have practices as quick as 1–2 minutes!
- Look in the mirror and tell yourself one thing you like about yourself
- Reach out to someone who helps you feel good about yourself
- Sing your favorite song
- Draw or color something
- Go to bed 10 minutes earlier than usual
- Close your eyes and focus on your breath for 1 minute
- Hug someone
- Write down 5 things you are grateful for
These are just examples of some of the ways you can practice mental health self care daily. We encourage you to find ways that work for YOU!
Mental Health Resources
While taking the time for mental health self care can improve overall wellbeing and keep us feeling good, sometimes we need more.
The following resources are available to you or anyone you know who may be struggling.
Crisis Resources
National Suicide Prevention Lifeline
Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) National Helpline
OK2Talk Helpline Teen Helpline
Help Finding Treatment
American Psychological Association
SAMSHA’s Behavioral Health Treatment Services Locator
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
American Psychiatric Association Foundation
Additional Resources
Can a furry friend help you cope with COVID?
You may be wondering, can owning a dog help you live a bit healthier? It turns out that new dog owners in general are a promising sign of better health!
We know that the last few months have put everyone into a new funk. Work, lifestyles, and exercise are all uniquely different than they may have been back when 2020 started.
That’s why we decided to look at how Evidation Members were resting and perhaps coping with some of these changes. To better understand our community, we decided to look at members who logged fitbit data in 2019 and 2020 between January and April to see if the pandemic was causing people to change up their nap schedule (hopefully for the better). Total number of naps per user per day were counted and the average nap count per day was calculated across our Evidation population. See the figure below:
It appears that members are indeed napping far more than they were in 2019, beginning at about the time shelter in place orders began (which was around March 15, 2020, see grey in graph). On average, after shelter in place began, Evidation Members napped 14.37% more compared to the previous year during this time period. That’s many more naps! And hopefully, people are using this time to rest and recuperate.
We know that being mindful of sleep is one way people can take care of their health. However, we also observed in the news that fostering dogs has been at an all time high. It has become so popular that there’s even a waitlist.
So, in addition to users napping far more compared to last year, we delved more into what other things users are doing differently during this uncertain time. We released a survey a few weeks ago asking our members about their dogs, what type of relationship they have with their pets, and their activity habits with their pets. We received over 35,000 responses!
The first thing we wanted to know about our members and their pets was whether they had recently fostered a dog. It turns out that many people have begun to foster dogs, likely due to the pandemic. In total, 1,500+ Achievers indicated that they fostered their dog in between February and April of this year. Compare that to only 450+ Achievers during that time period last year. It definitely appears that the pandemic is causing people to go out and lend a helping hand to a homeless dog.
Of the people who recently fostered a dog, 55% indicated that they are now working from home due to the coronavirus. 39% said that they are still going into work, and 5% indicated that they had worked at home prior to the pandemic. These newly remote workers appear to be helping keep these shelters empty.
You may be wondering, can owning a dog help you live a bit healthier? It turns out that new dog owners in general are a promising sign of better health! For those that got their dog in 2019 or 2020, we found that members walk on average about 350 steps more per day, comparing the 30 days prior to getting a dog with the 30 days post getting a dog. Even in pandemic times (though members are walking far less than their 2019 dog owner counterparts, by about 1000 steps per day for those that got their dogs in March and April), members with new dogs are getting a 200 step increase in steps pre vs post dog ownership! Of course, this is expected, and we’re happy to report that dogs can help you get more steps. This trend turned out to be especially true for the older folks in our population. The 50+ population increased their steps by about 500 steps on average, compared to the ~200 step increase for those who are less than 50. Take a look:
Another interesting question we asked our members was whether or not they sleep with their pets and how often per week they sleep with their pets. While we didn’t see a necessary difference in sleep quality or total time when our members had their dog buddies snoozing with them, we did see many people report that they sleep next to their dogs. In fact, 73% of Evidation Members said they nap or sleep next to their dog, at least once per week. For members who said they nap or sleep next to their dog, over 19,000 reported to nap or sleep next to their dog at least 4 times a week! This may sound surprising for the folks who may not have furry pals, but many can attest that sleeping next to their dogs can be a comforting ritual.
The last thing we wanted to explore was whether we could learn anything about our members who had reported that having a dog had helped them manage with their health-condition (heart condition, limited mobility, etc). We found that 1000+ members agreed that having a dog helped. It seemed as though having a furry friend was very helpful for emotional support and well being. We did not find any concrete information around managing conditions, but were glad to hear that those who had self reported with many conditions (specifically anxiety, asthma, chronic pain, depression, diabetes, high cholesterol, hypertension and migraines) and who had a higher resting heart rate found having a pet to be supportive.
Give the Happiness Project Podcast a Listen
Check out The Happiness Lab podcast by Dr. Laurie Santos
Given how tumultuous a time it has been for all, we found this podcast with episodes that will lift your spirits. The Happiness Lab podcast is narrated by Dr. Laurie Santos who is a Yale professor who teaches a class called “Psychology and the Good Life.” Through various episodes, Dr. Santos references the latest, relevant scientific research and relates them to everyday experiences and some unusual moments.
In this specific series, she’s curated a variety of content related to coping with the coronavirus. We found a lot of the commentary relatable and useful.
The content specific to coronavirus includes the following:
- Beat Your Isolation Loneliness
- Coach Yourself Through a Crisis
- Rising to a Challenge
- Calm Can Be Contagious
- Help Others to Help Yourself
- Keep Your Relationship Happy
- Checking in with Susan David
Susan David is a Psychologist at Harvard Medical School who offers ways to manage fear and panic through healthy strategies that anyone can adopt. - Laurie’s Personal Tips