Carmarthenshire residents are turning to exercise to help them improve their mental health during the Covid19 Pandemic.

According to a YouGov survey carried out in December, a third of those living in mid and west Wales said exercise has helped sustain or improve their mental health since the start of the pandemic.

It comes as the Welsh Government is encouraging people to ‘help us, help you’ by practicing self-care and adopting small changes to help improve mental well-being, particularly at a time when levels of anxiety are higher than usual.

The traditional benefits of exercise have been to improve and maintain physical fitness but, more recently, the benefit of exercise to improve mental health has come to the fore. Exercise decreases the stress hormones such as cortisol and increases endorphins. Endorphins are the body’s natural ‘feel-good’ chemicals, and when they are released through exercise, your mood is boosted naturally. As well as endorphins, exercise also releases adrenaline, serotonin, and dopamine. These chemicals work together to make you feel good.

Sarah Jones, a self-employed mother of two boys who lives in Carmarthenshire took up running less than a year ago and signed up to the @_run1000 challenge to help her mental health and keep her running motivation going during lockdown.

She said, “Perhaps home-schooling has hit a groove, you’re comfortably working from home, you have time for you, and you feel supported and in control. For many of us, though, the opposite of all those things is true. Just as with the first lockdown, never has my running been more important. I go for a run to have a bit of time to myself to manage my thoughts and then the rest of my day feels a bit more manageable.”

Professor Jon Bisson, Deputy Director of the National Centre for Mental Health (NCMH) and Director of Traumatic Stress Wales, said: “There are several important ways to help reduce the risk of developing mental health consequences due to the Covid-19 pandemic. Eating healthily, taking exercise on a regular basis, keeping regular sleeping patterns, establishing a good structure for our days, and engaging in relaxing activities are always important to promote health and wellbeing.

“I would like to stress that if you are experiencing a mental health crisis or feel the need for additional support, please do ask for help. Some of us will need more formal input and services remain available and are keen to provide this.”

With more than £700m invested annually, The Welsh Government spends more on mental health than on any other aspect of the NHS.

If you are concerned about your mental health and would like confidential help and advice then you can call the mental health listening and emotional support line which is open 24 hours a day, seven days a week on 0800132737. Alternatively, you can text ‘help’ to 81066 or visit: callhelpline.org.uk/