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Video games a 'viable and effective' treatment for depression, say researchers!

The findings showed that playing the specifically designed video game helped people feel they had some control over their depression.

Video games a 'viable and effective' treatment for depression, say researchers! (Image for representational purposes only)

New Delhi: Video games have definitely taken over the world as a form of entertainment, with kids and adults alike engaging in the fun.

Most people also play video games as a means to vent their stress or anger. But, now, a study forthcoming in the journal Computers in Human Behavior, found that video games can actually be used as a form of treatment for those suffering from depression.

The mental condition that is gradually taking over the world is becoming more and more common with every passing day.

WHO statistics reveal that depression affects more than 300 million people across the world and close to 800,000 people die due to suicide caused by depression every year.

Of course, there are certain ways and means advised by doctors to treat the problem, however, a team of researchers have added another solution to the list of treatments saying that playing video games is a viable and effective way to treat depression.

The findings showed that playing the specifically designed video game helped people feel they had some control over their depression.

Such video games had the potential to target depression caused by both internal – such as chemical imbalance or hereditary factor – and external factors – like issues in job or relationship.

"Through the use of carefully designed persuasive message prompts ... mental health video games can be perceived and used as a more viable and less attrition-ridden treatment option," said Subuhi Khan from the University of California - Davis in the US.

Portraying depression as something caused internally because of biological factors and providing a video game-based app for brain training made participants feel that they could do something to control their depression.

This supports other research that shows that brain-training games have the potential to induce cognitive changes, the researchers said.

On the other hand, portraying depression as a condition caused by external factors led users to spend more time playing the game – again, perhaps giving them a feeling of control over their situation.

But this result was likely due to immediate engagement and was unlikely to have long-term benefits, the study noted.

In the study, forthcoming in the journal Computers in Human Behavior, the team asked 160 student volunteers to play six, three-minute games.

Each game was an adaptation of neurophysiological training tasks that have been shown to improve cognitive control among people experiencing depression and ended on basic inspirational notes to inspire the participant to play the game.

The results revealed that when the video game users were messaged reminders, they played the game more often and in some cases increased the time spent playing.

(With IANS inputs)

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