Physical Exercise for Stress Management in Care Homes

Using realistic movement and exercise habits to support stress recovery, energy, and resilience in residential and nursing care

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Types of Exercise for Effective Stress Management

Person stretching outdoors at sunrise

Different kinds of activity reduce stress in different ways. Staff do not need a single perfect routine. A practical plan can combine light aerobic exercise, strength work, stretching and mobility, relaxation-based movement and everyday active choices that fit into daily life.

Useful categories

  • Aerobic activity: walking, cycling, swimming, dancing or other activity that raises breathing comfortably.
  • Strength work: bodyweight exercises, resistance bands or supervised gym work that supports function and helps prevent injury.
  • Mobility and stretching: gentle movements for the back, hips, shoulders and neck to maintain ease of movement.
  • Relaxation-based movement: yoga, tai chi or slow stretching where appropriate.
  • Incidental activity: stairs, short walks, active commuting or short movement breaks during the day.

Scenario

A care assistant wants to be more active but has caring responsibilities at home and irregular shifts. She keeps planning long gym sessions, missing them, and then giving up.

What types of exercise might be more realistic?

Variety helps. A stress-management exercise plan can include walking, stretching, strength, mobility and recovery movement rather than one perfect activity.

 

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