
>> A NEW STUDY FINDS HIGH LEVELS OF STRESS CAN MAKE IT HARDER FOR PEOPLE TO CONCENTRATE OR EVEN LEARN SOMETHING NEW LATER IN LIFE. I’M NOT SURE WE NEEDED TO STUDY TO TELL US THAT. HERE TO TALK ABOUT THAT IS DR. MANUEL PACHECO, A PSYCHIATRIST AT TUFTS MEDICAL CENTER. >> WE’VE KNOWN FOR A LONG TIME THAT STRESS CAN LEAD TO PHYSICAL PROBLEMS, SUCH AS HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE, HEART DISEASE, AND OBESITY. WHAT DOES THIS RESEARCH SHOW ABOUT THE IMPACT ON OUR COGNITIVE FUNCTION? >> IT BUILDS ON PREVIOUS RESEARCH THAT THE RISK AND THE PROGRESSION OF COGNITIVE ISSUES LIKE THINKING, PERFORMING TASKS, INCREASES WITH THE AMOUNT OF STRESS PEOPLE FEEL. >> THE RESEARCHERS ALSO BROKE DOWN THEIR RESULTS BY RACIAL GROUPS. WERE THERE ANY DIFFERENCES? >> PREVIOUS RESEARCH WITH SMALLER GROUP STUDIES AND DIFFERENT TYPES OF LOOKING AT THE STATISTICS SHOW THAT THERE WAS A DIFFERENCE BETWEEN DIFFERENT ETHNIC GROUPS BUT THIS STUDY DID SAY THAT BLACK PEOPLE DID HAVE HIGHER PERCEIVED LEVELS OF STRESS COMPARED TO OTHERS IN THE STUDY BUT THERE WAS NO DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ETHNIC GROUP AND THE LEVEL OF STRESS, IT JUST CONFIRMED THAT YOUR RISK FOR HAVING COGNITIVE PROBLEMS, THINKING PROBLEMS IS DIRECTLY RELATED TO THE AMOUNT OF STRESS YOU ARE EXPERIENCING. >> MOST PEOPLE ARE USED TO SOME LEVEL OF STRESS IN THEIR DAILY LIVES. WHAT ARE SOME OF THE WARNING SIGNS THAT IT COULD BE TOO MUCH? >> ONE THING I WANTED TO SAY ABOUT THE PREVIOUS QUESTION IS THAT EVEN THOUGH THERE WERE NO DIFFERENCES BETWEEN BLACK PATIENTS AND OTHER PEOPLE, IT’S NOT MEANT TO DISMISS THE NEGATIVE EXPERIENCE OF DISCRIMINATION AND THE STRESS THAT THAT CAUSES. I WANTED TO CLARIFY THAT. THE WARNING SIGNS WHEN PEOPLE ARE HAVING A LOT OF STRESS IN TERMS OF THEIR THINKING IS FIRST OF ALL, THERE IS A CHICKEN AND THE EGG KIND OF THING. YOU TALKED ABOUT HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE. WHEN PEOPLE HAVE A LOT OF STRESS, THEY BECOME OVERWHELMED AND THEY STOP DOING THINGS THEY DID PREVIOUSLY THAT HELPED THEM TO CONTROL DIFFERENT MEDICAL PROBLEMS. THEY EAT A POOR DIET, THEY MAYBE DON’T TAKE THEIR MEDICATION AS MUCH AS THEY USED TO. THINGS LIKE THAT. THEY DON’T EXERCISE AS MUCH BECAUSE THEY’RE OVERWHELMED. WARNING SIGNS FOR SOMEONE YOU’RE WITH AND YOU CARE ABOUT IS IF THE PEOPLE THAT YOU LOVE AND ARE WITH YOU ARE NOT ABLE TO CONCENTRATE AS MUCH AS THEY USED TO BECAUSE THEY FEELING OVERWHELMED BY STRESS. IF THERE ARE THINGS THEY USED TO DO BEFORE IN TERMS OF BALANCING THE CHECKBOOK OR OTHER COMPLEX THINGS, IF THEY ARE STARTING TO HAVE SOME ISSUES WITH THAT IT’S A SIGN THAT THEY SHOULD GET TESTED FOR THEIR THINKING AND ALSO TRY TO ENCOURAGE THEM TO KEEP DOING THE POSITIVE THINGS THEY DID TO DECREASE THEIR STRESS.
About half of Americans said they experienced stress within the past day, according to a Gallup Poll survey from last October, a finding that was consistent for most of 2022. Personal finances and current and political events were major sources of stress for one-third or more of adults, a survey from CNN in partnership with the Kaiser Family Foundation found in October.Stress isn’t inherently bad, said Richard Scrivener, a personal trainer and product development manager at London’s Trainfitness, an education technology company. Stressing your muscles through weight training, for example, leads to beneficial changes. In addition, short-term stress in healthy people typically isn’t a hazard. “But if stress is continuous, especially in older or unhealthy individuals, the long-term effects of the response to stress may lead to significant health issues,” Scrivener said.Can stress make you sick?Stress occurs when you face a new, unpredictable or threatening situation, and you don’t know whether you can manage it successfully, said clinical psychologist Dr. Karmel Choi, an assistant professor in the Center for Precision Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.When you’re physically or emotionally stressed, your body snaps into fight-or-flight mode. Cortisol rushes through your system, signaling your body to release glucose. Glucose, in turn, provides energy to your muscles so you are better prepared to fight off a threat or run away. During this cortisol rush, your heart rate may rise, your breathing may become rapid, and you may feel dizzy or nauseated.If you truly needed to fight or flee a predator, your cortisol levels would drop back down once the conflict was over. When you’re chronically stressed, however, those levels stay elevated.Video below: Woman ‘was dead for 75 minutes’ due to stressRemaining in that heightened state is no good since high levels of cortisol can exacerbate health conditions such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and chronic gastrointestinal problems, according to the Cleveland Clinic. Stress can also cause or contribute to anxiety, irritability, poor sleep, substance abuse, chronic distrust or worry, and more.How to relieve stressLuckily, there are many ways to combat stress. Keep a daily routine, get plenty of sleep, eat healthy foods, and limit your time following the news or engaging in social media, recommends the World Health Organization. It also helps to stay connected with others and to employ calming practices such as meditation and deep breathing. One of the most successful tools, though, is physical activity. “Exercise is remarkably effective for managing psychological stress,” Choi said. “Exercise doesn’t remove what’s causing the stress, but it can boost mood, reduce tension and improve sleep — all of which are impacted by stress — and ultimately this can support people to approach their challenges in a more balanced way.”Numerous studies back up the positive effect of exercise on stress. Physical activity, and especially exercise, significantly reduced the symptoms of anxiety in a study published in Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, for example. Similarly, a Frontiers in Psychology study of university students found that regularly engaging in low- to moderate-intensity aerobic exercises for six weeks helped alleviate their depressive symptoms and perceived stress.Get moving to release feel-good chemicalsThe reason exercise is so effective in squashing stress is fairly simple. Exercise causes your body to produce more endorphins, which are neurotransmitters that boost your mood. Movement also combats elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol while improving blood flow.Video below: Participate in 11 minutes of daily exercise to extend your lifeJessica Honig, a clinical social worker in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, said exercise empowers her clients because they realize that, through movement, they hold the key to reset and lessen their stress. “It’s also one of the best ways to pause — to break up or revive energy from a spiraling, unproductive mindset,” she said.What types of exercise are best? While studies show aerobic exercise, such as swimming, running, dancing and boxing, may be the most efficient at getting mood-boosting endorphins rushing through your body, gentler forms of physical activity work, too. Think yoga, strength training and walking. In addition, sometimes less is more.”What we’re seeing from the data,” Choi said, “is you actually need to move less than the recommended guidelines to see positive effects on mood.”Since stress loads may change weekly or even daily, Scrivener said it can be helpful to alter your exercise based on your mood. Feeling a cheery 8 on a scale of 1 to 10? Then go for a run. Barely hitting a 3? Opt for something gentle. “This could be a 15-minute stretch followed by a light cycle for 15 minutes, or a 30-minute swim followed by a sauna session,” he said.Make exercise a social activitySince social engagement is a powerful protective factor for positive mental health, Choi encourages exercising with others. Studies also have shown being out in nature boosts your mood, so exercising outside with friends may provide even more benefits.Scientists continue to study the link between stress and physical activity. A small study published recently found that combining mindfulness and physical activity can improve sleep and help regulate emotions more than either alone, Choi said. She also warned that people need to be careful not to go overboard on exercise or rely on it exclusively for coping with challenges. Doing so can backfire and create more stress.It’s also important to remember that humans are geared to release stress physically, no matter their age, said Honig, the social worker. “We see in children the permission to throw their body into pillows to release intense emotions,” she said. “We do not outgrow a need to physically release stress. We merely lose the outlets and social normalization of it.”
About half of Americans said they experienced stress within the past day, according to a Gallup Poll survey from last October, a finding that was consistent for most of 2022. Personal finances and current and political events were major sources of stress for one-third or more of adults, a survey from CNN in partnership with the Kaiser Family Foundation found in October.
Stress isn’t inherently bad, said Richard Scrivener, a personal trainer and product development manager at London’s Trainfitness, an education technology company. Stressing your muscles through weight training, for example, leads to beneficial changes. In addition, short-term stress in healthy people typically isn’t a hazard. “But if stress is continuous, especially in older or unhealthy individuals, the long-term effects of the response to stress may lead to significant health issues,” Scrivener said.
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Can stress make you sick?
Stress occurs when you face a new, unpredictable or threatening situation, and you don’t know whether you can manage it successfully, said clinical psychologist Dr. Karmel Choi, an assistant professor in the Center for Precision Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston.
When you’re physically or emotionally stressed, your body snaps into fight-or-flight mode. Cortisol rushes through your system, signaling your body to release glucose. Glucose, in turn, provides energy to your muscles so you are better prepared to fight off a threat or run away. During this cortisol rush, your heart rate may rise, your breathing may become rapid, and you may feel dizzy or nauseated.
If you truly needed to fight or flee a predator, your cortisol levels would drop back down once the conflict was over. When you’re chronically stressed, however, those levels stay elevated.
Video below: Woman ‘was dead for 75 minutes’ due to stress
Remaining in that heightened state is no good since high levels of cortisol can exacerbate health conditions such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and chronic gastrointestinal problems, according to the Cleveland Clinic. Stress can also cause or contribute to anxiety, irritability, poor sleep, substance abuse, chronic distrust or worry, and more.
How to relieve stress
Luckily, there are many ways to combat stress. Keep a daily routine, get plenty of sleep, eat healthy foods, and limit your time following the news or engaging in social media, recommends the World Health Organization. It also helps to stay connected with others and to employ calming practices such as meditation and deep breathing. One of the most successful tools, though, is physical activity.
“Exercise is remarkably effective for managing psychological stress,” Choi said. “Exercise doesn’t remove what’s causing the stress, but it can boost mood, reduce tension and improve sleep — all of which are impacted by stress — and ultimately this can support people to approach their challenges in a more balanced way.”
Numerous studies back up the positive effect of exercise on stress. Physical activity, and especially exercise, significantly reduced the symptoms of anxiety in a study published in Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, for example. Similarly, a Frontiers in Psychology study of university students found that regularly engaging in low- to moderate-intensity aerobic exercises for six weeks helped alleviate their depressive symptoms and perceived stress.
Get moving to release feel-good chemicals
The reason exercise is so effective in squashing stress is fairly simple. Exercise causes your body to produce more endorphins, which are neurotransmitters that boost your mood. Movement also combats elevated levels of the stress hormone cortisol while improving blood flow.
Video below: Participate in 11 minutes of daily exercise to extend your life
Jessica Honig, a clinical social worker in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, said exercise empowers her clients because they realize that, through movement, they hold the key to reset and lessen their stress. “It’s also one of the best ways to pause — to break up or revive energy from a spiraling, unproductive mindset,” she said.
What types of exercise are best? While studies show aerobic exercise, such as swimming, running, dancing and boxing, may be the most efficient at getting mood-boosting endorphins rushing through your body, gentler forms of physical activity work, too. Think yoga, strength training and walking. In addition, sometimes less is more.
“What we’re seeing from the data,” Choi said, “is you actually need to move less than the recommended guidelines to see positive effects on mood.”
Since stress loads may change weekly or even daily, Scrivener said it can be helpful to alter your exercise based on your mood. Feeling a cheery 8 on a scale of 1 to 10? Then go for a run. Barely hitting a 3? Opt for something gentle. “This could be a 15-minute stretch followed by a light cycle for 15 minutes, or a 30-minute swim followed by a sauna session,” he said.
Make exercise a social activity
Since social engagement is a powerful protective factor for positive mental health, Choi encourages exercising with others. Studies also have shown being out in nature boosts your mood, so exercising outside with friends may provide even more benefits.
Scientists continue to study the link between stress and physical activity. A small study published recently found that combining mindfulness and physical activity can improve sleep and help regulate emotions more than either alone, Choi said. She also warned that people need to be careful not to go overboard on exercise or rely on it exclusively for coping with challenges. Doing so can backfire and create more stress.
It’s also important to remember that humans are geared to release stress physically, no matter their age, said Honig, the social worker. “We see in children the permission to throw their body into pillows to release intense emotions,” she said. “We do not outgrow a need to physically release stress. We merely lose the outlets and social normalization of it.”