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AMERICA'S NO. 1 HEALTH PROBLEM
Why is there more stress today?
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Time magazine's June 6, 1983 cover story called stress "The Epidemic of the Eighties"
and referred to it as our leading health problem; there can be little
doubt that the situation has progressively worsened since then. Numerous
surveys confirm that adult Americans perceive they are under much more
stress than a decade or two ago. A 1996 Prevention magazine
survey found that almost 75% feel they have "great stress" one day a week
with one out of three indicating they feel this way more than twice a week.
In the same 1983 survey only 55% said they felt under great stress on a
weekly basis. It has been estimated that 75 - 90 percent of all visits
to primary care physicians are for stress related problems. Job Stress is far and away the
leading source of stress for adults but stress levels have also escalated
in children, teenagers, college students and the elderly for other reasons,
including: increased crime, violence and other threats to personal
safety; pernicious peer pressures that lead to substance abuse and other
unhealthy life style habits; social isolation and loneliness; the erosion
of family and religious values and ties; the loss of other strong sources
of social support that are powerful stress busters. |
Why is stress now different and more dangerous?
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Contemporary stress tends to be more pervasive,
persistent and insidious because it stems primarily from psychological
than physical threats. It is associated with ingrained and immediate
reactions over which we have no control that were originally designed
to be beneficial such as:
- heart rate and blood pressure soar to
increase the flow of blood to the brain to improve decision making,
- blood sugar rises to furnish more fuel
for energy as the result of the breakdown of glycogen, fat and protein
stores,
- blood is shunted away from the gut, where
it is not immediately needed for purposes of digestion, to the large
muscles of the arms and legs to provide more strength in combat, or greater
speed in getting away from a scene of potential peril,
- clotting occurs more quickly to prevent
blood loss from lacerations or internal hemorrhage.
These and myriad other immediate and automatic
responses have been exquisitely honed over the lengthy course of human
evolution as life saving measures to facilitate primitive man's ability
to deal with physical challenges. However, the nature of stress for
modern man is not an occasional confrontation with a saber-toothed tiger
or a hostile warrior but rather a host of emotional threats like getting
stuck in traffic and fights with customers, co-workers, or family members,
that often occur several times a day. Unfortunately, our bodies still
react with these same, archaic fight or flight responses that are now not
only not useful but potentially damaging and deadly. Repeatedly invoked,
it is not hard to see how they can contribute to hypertension, strokes,
heart attacks, diabetes, ulcers, neck or low back pain and other "Diseases
of Civilization".
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How can stress cause so many diseases?
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these effects are due to increased sympathetic nervous system activity
and an outpouring of adrenaline, cortisol and other stress-related hormones.
Certain types of chronic and more insidious stress due to loneliness, poverty,
bereavement, depression and frustration due to discrimination are associated
with impaired immune system resistance to viral linked disorders ranging
from the common cold and herpes to AIDS and cancer. Stress can
have effects on other hormones, brain neurotransmitters, additional small
chemical messengers elsewhere, prostaglandins, as well as crucial enzyme
systems, and metabolic activities that are still unknown. Research
in these areas may help to explain how stress can contribute to depression,
anxiety and its diverse effects on the gastrointestinal tract, skin and
other organs.
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For the latest "STRESS" related news and research, click on the following
link:
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What happens in the mind of man is always reflected in the disease of his
body ...
René Dubos-
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