The Impact Of Sea Swimming On The Mental Health Of Adults
Abstract
Background: Past evidence has showed the impact of blue spaces on the psychological health of
individuals with or without diagnoses of mental illnesses. Sea swimming is among the blue
spaces with potential beneficial psychological outcomes. Hence, there is a need to examine the
effect of sea swimming on psychological health as this is an under researched area. Further, there
is a lack of systematic reviews in the research area on the impact of sea swimming on mental
health.
Aim: To identify the potential factors that may moderate the association between open water
swimming (pool or non-pool) such as individual characteristics, forms of swimming
environment, or frequency of swimming and the psychological outcomes such as depression,
anxiety, stress, and general well-being; To evaluate the quality of the current evidence on the
relationship between sea swimming and the mental health of adults
Methodology: Science Direct, Scopus, Medline, Google Scholar, and JSTOR were searched
with selected keywords. An expert librarian helped with formulating the search strategy.
PRISMA 2020 Flow Diagram was used for screening and selecting the studies while a manual
elimination of the duplicates was conducted. A data extraction matrix generated relevant
characteristics of the studies. RoB 2 and ROBINS-I Tools were used for critical appraisal while
thematic synthesis by Thomas and Harden (2008) was used for generating codes, descriptive, and
analytical themes.
Results: The search and screening generated ten relevant studies. The study found that sea
swimming improves mental health of adult. Sea swimming enhanced emotional wellbeing of
adults by reducing anger, confusion, fears, and stabilising their mood. Swimming improved the
psychological state of the adults by reducing anxiety, stress, and depression. On the other hand,
the synthesis of the ten studies found that sea swimming enhanced the social wellbeing of the
adults with or without existing diagnosis of mental illness or impairment.
Conclusion: Sea swimming is essential for adults’ psychological wellbeing. Clinical practice
could recommend swimming as part of therapies to treat or manage psychological impairments.
Future studies could use RCTs to compare the effects of inland and sea swimming on the mental
health of young adults.
Description
Keywords
Swimming, mental health