Group training is better for your health

Trainer Pierre van der Merwe giving a Focusmaster class to Ani Polydorou, Lorenzo Arendse and Hassan Kawesa. A new study has found that group fitness classes might actually be better for you. Picture: David Ritchie

Trainer Pierre van der Merwe giving a Focusmaster class to Ani Polydorou, Lorenzo Arendse and Hassan Kawesa. A new study has found that group fitness classes might actually be better for you. Picture: David Ritchie

Published Nov 6, 2017

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Dragging yourself to the gym is hard enough when you're riding solo, but group workouts are an entirely different beast of fitness.

Huffing and puffing like a red-faced primate while you pop a squat next to a sweaty stranger might not be your cup of tea - and we don't blame you - but a new study has found that group fitness classes might actually be better for you.

Not only do they tend to be more enjoyable, thanks to upbeat playlists and enthusiastic instructors, group workouts may also improve our mental wellbeing. 

Published in The Journal of the American Osteopathic Association, the research showed that group workouts can improve mental, physical and emotional health.

While physical and emotional wellbeing were bolstered by 25% and 26% respectively by regular group exercise, mental health improved by 13%.

Scientists also found that fitness classes decreased stress levels by 26%, which - on National Stress Awareness Day - is quite the revelation for tightly-wound folk.

However, further research may be necessary in order to confirm the link between group exercise and stress reduction.

The 12-week study was conducted on a very small and specific sample of people: 69 students at the University of New England College of

Osteopathic Medicine.

Plus, participants were given a choice as to whether they worked out in a group or alone.

This means that they could've simply made decisions based on personal preferences and would've subsequently reaped more benefits anyway.

Finally, given that the participants all went to the same school, it's likely that many of them knew each other, which could also explain why they found their exercise programme to be more enjoyable and

subsequently stress-relieving.

Despite these factors,

however, the scientists

concluded that regular group

fitness classes could improve the emotional wellbeing and stress levels of medical

students.

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