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ITB Berlin: Holidays make one healthy and happy

May 4, 2015 • admin

Holidays benefit people’s health and allow them to get over the tension in their day-to-day lives. a contemporary study has now confirmed what many travellers regularly experience. Dr. Jessica de Bloom, a piece and organisational psychologist on the University of Tampere in Finland, has examined how holidays benefit people’s overall healthiness and are available to a couple fascinating conclusions from which the tourism industry can profit. She presented her findings at a workshop organised by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Tourismusforschung at this year’s ITB Berlin Convention. In keeping with the study, holidays not just benefit people’s health but cause them to happier to boot.

These latest research findings concerning personal happiness confirm that folk who spend their money on concerts, family trips or short breaks are happier than individuals who acquire material objects equivalent to jewellery, clothing and electronic devices. The explanation, in accordance with Dr. Jessica de Bloom, is they can’t be compared. “One can compare a designer suit with a dear watch, but not one’s diving holidays at the Red Sea and a colleague’s city break in Barcelona. What’s more, experiences don’t wear out over the years.”

Switching off to close out stress
Taking a break from everyday routines also benefits one’s health. Scientists and doctors conducting the Framingham Heart Study found that folks who don’t go on holiday for longer periods are at greater risk of turning into ill or maybe dying in advance of individuals who regularly go on breaks. Frequent breaks as opposed to extended holidays are crucial to maintaining good health. All types of holiday examined by the study, whether a brief break or a 3-week hiking trip, produced evidence of comparative benefits to people’s future health. Dr. Jessica de Bloom compares this with the consequences of sleep: “One cannot postpone one’s sleep or relaxation requirements. One long summer holiday cannot catch up on an entire year of exertions and overtime.“ So that you can remain healthy the key is to sit back frequently, she added.

Freedom to make one’s own choices on holiday helps one to relax
Whether or not a vacation is relaxing and remembered as such is determined by a number of factors. In line with de Bloom’s study, 17 per cent of individuals feel worse once they are on holiday than before they went. One of the reasons are negative events corresponding to travel stress or a sudden illness. Her study also confirms that, crucially, this is often influenced less by the kind of holiday activities people undertake than by them having the liberty to make their very own choices. Activities should satisfy people’s needs and it’s the holidaymakers who ought to be in a position to choose them. In other words, having the ability to make one’s own choices when on holiday is the foremost to an ideal break. Actually, activities play a good greater role as they influence people’s perception of ways long they were on holiday. Time simply flies for people who undertake various holiday activities. Afterwards, they remember having had a protracted holiday, unlike those that spend their time inside the hotel or at the beach. The last day on holiday can well decide how people remember their trip: “Packing suitcases and other unappealing activities are best treated an afternoon before leaving to make certain the last day on holiday could be enjoyed to the full“, advises de Bloom.

Reducing stress factors and galvanizing happiness
The findings of this study on holidays and relaxation may be of practical use to the tourism industry. In keeping with de Bloom, travel agency sales of holiday tours could improve a customer’s holiday experience, providing travel agents are familiar with the positive effects and the way to lessen stress. What’s more, tourism products must be further improved to make certain tourists enjoy maximum satisfaction when on holiday.

Dr. Martin Buck, Director of Travel & Logistics, Messe Berlin: “These latest research findings give us a deeper insight into the purposes of today’s travellers. They give valuable inspiration for creating innovative tourism products and provides companies the decisive edge in a hotly contested travel market.“