Research explores the winter blues

Millions of Brits are living a “mushroom” existence throughout the winter – never venturing outside during working hours, according to new research.

 

Six in 10 people do not go outside at all during office hours – it’s STILL dark when eight in 10 people leave for work in the morning and dark AGAIN when 90% go home.

Half of respondents admit their work rate suffers because of the lack of sun – on average the research found people start to become less effective from 1.41pm onwards.

The research commissioned by Cambridge Nutraceuticals, producers of FutureYou health supplements, explored how wintertime affects the moods and levels of productivity of 2,000 UK adults.

A spokesman for Cambridge Nutraceuticals said: “As the results suggest, a lack of sunshine is really significant - our bodies need it in order to generate vitamin D.  Even when people do spend time outside in the sunshine, the winter sunlight is so weak in Britain that our bodies generate only minimal vitamin D anyway.

“And getting enough vitamin D is really important because it can reduce the risk of osteoporosis in older adults, while it also helps to achieve strong bones in children and adolescents.

“To keep healthy vitamin D levels in winter, people need to make sure they get it through their diet or through appropriate supplementation.”

Although eight in 10 respondents will take a lunchbreak at work, they will only venture outside twice a week for just 25 minutes on average during the winter.

Over half of those surveyed admit they make less effort to go outdoors during their break time in the winter – with 83 per cent saying: “it’s too cold”.

Indeed taking a lunch break is the only time seven in 10 hardworking Brits will see any daylight in the working week.

And worse still, around half of people admit there are weekends when they don’t leave the house at all in the colder months.

Seven in 10 of those surveyed say they don’t get enough exposure to daylight during the winter and over two thirds of respondents feel more tired as a result.

Almost half of people believe they suffer from the “winter blues” and seven in 10 respondents find it harder to motivate themselves during the wintertime.

More than half or people said they go out for a walk less often and a third will also exercise less. While one in three admit they don’t socialise in the colder months compared to rest of the year.

Instead three in five people watch TV at home, 50 per cent eat “lots” of food and over a third spend time in their pyjamas.

A spokesman for Cambridge Nutraceuticals added: “When we reach 50 we’re less good at producing vitamin D - even in the sunshine. Overweight and darker skinned people also produce lower levels.

“Although you can get vitamin D through certain foods, sometimes eating enough of the right foods is difficult, so more and more people are taking vitamin D supplements.

“The problem is ‘standard’ supplements aren’t easily absorbed by the body, whereas our unique vitamin D formulation uses black pepper extract which allows vitamin D to be better absorbed” Cambridge Nutraceuticals develops natural healthcare supplements with proven “clinical effectiveness”,.

It is well-known for its Ateronon Heart Health product, also known as  ‘The Tomato Pill’.

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