Attending Scouts And Guides May Lower Risk Of Mental Illness In Later Life, Study Finds

The organisations focus on resilience, teamwork and learning.

Attending Scouts or Guides as a child may help lower an individual’s risk of mental illness in later life, a study has suggested.

Children who participate in the organisations - which aim to develop qualities such as self-reliance, resolve and a desire for self-learning - are likely to have better mental health in middle age, the findings revealed.

Such activities, which frequently involve being outdoors, also seem to remove the relatively higher likelihood of mental illness in those from poorer backgrounds.

The findings were drawn from a lifelong study of almost 10,000 people from across the UK who were born in November 1958, known as the National Child Development Study.

The Scout Association

Scientists from the Universities of Edinburgh and Glasgow, who analysed the data, found that those who had belonged to the Scouts or Guides tended to have better mental health at age 50.

Around one quarter of study participants had been in the Scouts or Guides, and those were found to be around 15% less likely to suffer from anxiety or mood disorders, compared with others.

The researchers said their findings suggest programmes that help children develop skills such as self-reliance and teamwork, and encourage being active outdoors, may have lifelong benefits.

Attending the Guides or Scouts may help build resilience against common stresses in life or it may increase a person’s chances of achieving more in life, so that they are less likely to experience such stresses, the researchers said.

Andrew Thorp, media relations officer at The Scouting Association, told The Huffington Post UK: “Scouting provides young people and adults with an opportunity to develop skills for life, be resilient and deal with the challenges that come their way. Its great that this independent report documents the value of what we do as an organisation.

“Through initiatives such as our A Million Hands Campaign, The Scout Association is helping give young people the ability to develop mental wellbeing throughout their lives.”

The study, supported by the Economic and Social Research Council, was published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

Lead researcher Professor Chris Dibben, of the University of Edinburgh’s School of GeoSciences, said: “It is quite startling that this benefit is found in people so many years after they have attended guides or scouts.

“We expect the same principles would apply to the scouts and guides of today and so, given the high costs of mental ill health to individuals and society, a focus on voluntary youth programmes such as the guides and scouts might be very sensible.”

Professor Richard Mitchell, of the Centre for Research on Environment, Society and Health at the University of Glasgow, added: “Governments and health services around the world struggle to do something about the health gap between richer and poorer people, so this new evidence that being a scout or guide can help is very important.”

Emma Brodey, 18, a member of the Girlguiding Advocate Panel, said: “Girlguiding is, and for over 100 years now has been, for the girl. It offers a safe space where they can be themselves, build their confidence and escape from the ever-increasing pressures in their lives.

“Women tell us every week that their accomplishments and memories through Guiding have lasted throughout their lives, so it’s amazing to see research showing the long-term benefits of being a member of Girlguiding.”

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