The Capital

Want to improve children’s health and wellness? Have them volunteer

- By Nancy Clanton Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on

From the pandemic to social media to school pressures, there are plenty of reasons for children’s and teens’ health and wellness to suffer. To improve their offspring’s outlook, parents might want to involve them in volunteeri­ng, research shows.

“Volunteer service is any action that contribute­s directly or indirectly to the welfare of others,” Psychology

Today wrote, “and its ethos is a connection with and responsibi­lity to something beyond oneself.”

Although small studies have found kids who volunteer have reduced risk of cardiovasc­ular problems and are more engaged in school, there had previously been no large-scale research on the subject.

Last year, however, a study published in JAMA Network Open asked parents of 22,126 children, ages 6-11, and 29,769 adolescent­s, ages 12-17, about their kids’ volunteer activity.

The parents reported whether their child or teen “participat­ed in any form of volunteer service at school, in the community, or church/synagogue/ mosque.” The survey also asked parents to rate their kids’ health and wellness in five areas: (1) excellent and/ or very good health; (2) flourishin­g; (3) anxiety; (4) depression; and (5) behavioral problems.

Based on the parents’ responses, volunteeri­ng was associated with the following:

Higher odds of excellent/very good health in both children and adolescent­s.

Higher odds of flourishin­g in both age groups.

Lower odds of behavioral problems in both groups.

Lower odds of anxiety in adolescent­s; no associatio­n for children.

No associatio­n between volunteeri­ng and depression for either group.

Psychology Today points out the potential for parental bias in the results, but said the results show “volunteeri­ng correlates with important benefits for children and adolescent­s.”

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