Mental health

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Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 hour ago

When Did We Lose the Art of Containment?

Practicing emotional containment—holding feelings to choose when and whom to share with—reduces distress and avoids exhausting performative oversharing on social media.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 hours ago

When in Doubt, Do What's More Difficult

Choose the more difficult option when facing major decisions to expand your world, build self-confidence, and avoid anxiety-driven contraction of your comfort zone.
#overthinking
#autism
fromBuzzFeed
6 hours ago
Mental health

People Are Sharing The Common Parenting Styles That Can "Ruin A Child's Future"

fromBuzzFeed
6 hours ago
Mental health

People Are Sharing The Common Parenting Styles That Can "Ruin A Child's Future"

Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
10 hours ago

Can you guess our screen time? A priest, pensioner, tech CEO and teenager reveal all

A 16-year-old limits screen time to under an hour daily, avoids social media, and worries about online permanence and peers' heavy social-media use.
fromPsychology Today
15 hours ago

The Super Bowl Mentality

After 18 weeks of the NFL regular season, the moment is almost here. The Super Bowl represents the pinnacle of pressure. For the athletes that take the field, it's the moment they've been waiting for. The culmination of years of preparation for that one game. There is little margin for error and the moment is unforgiving. Yet, the psychological demands of Super Bowl game day aren't as unique as we think.
Mental health
Mental health
Optimal performance occurs at moderate arousal; too little or too much reduces effectiveness, and trauma can narrow emotional tolerance but can be expanded with practice.
#anxiety
fromPsychology Today
22 hours ago
Mental health

Are You Treating Anxiety or Emotion?

Some anger outbursts are anxiety reactions; treating them as anger rather than anxiety hinders recovery.
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago
Mental health

8 phrases people use when they're tired of pretending to be okay - Silicon Canals

Persistent phrases like "I'm fine" or "I just need to get through this week" often signal hidden anxiety, burnout, and emotional exhaustion.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
22 hours ago

6 Ways to Hold Things Together When Your Spouse Is Depressed

When a partner is depressed, prioritize your wellbeing, set limits, apply selective, practical support, and enlist outside help to maintain structure and reduce overwhelm.
fromPsychology Today
23 hours ago

Can Avoiding Dating Be Relationship OCD?

People may avoid romantic relationships for various reasons. Some genuinely prefer being single, others are focused on other life goals, and some may simply not feel drawn to dating at a certain stage in life. But for some, avoiding dating is not a free choice. Instead, it is driven by fear, doubt, and attempts to protect themselves from emotional distress. In these cases, relationship obsessive-compulsive disorder ( ROCD) may be operating quietly in the background, shaping decisions from behind the scenes.
Mental health
Mental health
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
1 day ago

Money Dysmorphia Explained: Why Smart People Feel Broke When They're Not - San Francisco Bay Times

Money dysmorphia causes intense financial anxiety and guilt despite objectively healthy finances, driving overwork, avoidance of desired experiences, and chronic uncertainty about having "enough."
Mental health
fromReadWrite
1 day ago

NCPG launches 1-800-MY-RESET problem gambling helpline

1-800-MY-RESET is now the National Problem Gambling Helpline, offering free, confidential, 24/7 access to a nationwide network of trained professionals and local referrals.
Mental health
fromAxios
19 hours ago

Immigration enforcement fears are reaching children - here's what parents can do

Adverse childhood experiences create chronic stress that impairs nervous system function, mental health, and long-term community economic and resource outcomes.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Moment You're In Matters More Than the One You Remember

One of my earliest cognitive therapy patients asked if we'd spend time exploring his past. He thought we might find patterns that would explain his depression. I was taken aback. I had just discovered a set of powerful, active techniques that helped people change how they felt in the here-and-now. As a psychiatric resident, I had seen that endless venting without specific techniques for change led to little or no relief.
Mental health
fromAbove the Law
1 day ago

The 'Social Media Addiction' Narrative May Be More Harmful Than Social Media Itself - Above the Law

The lawyers involved are explicitly using the tobacco playbook, comparing social media to cigarettes. But there's an important point here: "social media addiction" isn't actually a recognized clinical addiction. And a fascinating new study in Nature's Scientific Reports suggests that our collective insistence on using addiction language might actually be making things worse for users who want to change their behavior.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Chilling' hacking network is targeting vulnerable children, charity warns

The Molly Rose Foundation (MRF) said online networks linked to a global ecosystem labelled the Com were carrying out extreme exploitation, cyberbullying, violence and abuse and called for a coordinated global response from governments, regulators, law enforcement and tech companies. The warning follows the publication of a report by the online risk consultancy Resolver in partnership with the MRF, which was founded by the family of Molly Russell, a British teenager who killed herself in 2017 after viewing harmful content online.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
18 hours ago

Big Changes to Psychiatric Diagnoses Are Coming, Maybe

The DSM is the authoritative manual defining psychiatric diagnoses and is due for substantial revision, raising questions about scientific validity and clinical practicality.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

They're taught that showing feelings is shameful': eight reasons men don't go to therapy and why they should

Jake's marriage to Louise is in trouble, and she has insisted he come and see me. If not for Louise, you wouldn't be here, would you? I enquire tentatively. He looks sheepish at first; then emboldened, he gives an emphatic No. As is almost always the case, Jake's wife has registered a problem that has passed him by, and prompted his visit.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPhys
1 day ago

When both partners work from home: The hidden cost of always-on technology

When both partners work from home, digital interruptions increase after-work frustration, strain relationships, and impose a heavier psychological burden on women; planning can mitigate impacts.
#loneliness
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

8 things lower-middle-class people do to feel safe that wealthy people don't even think about - Silicon Canals

Growing up outside Manchester, I remember watching my mum count out exact change at the supermarket checkout, keeping a running total in her head as she shopped. Meanwhile, my university roommate would just toss things in his trolley without a second thought. That's when it hit me: Financial security isn't just about having money. It's about the mental space that money creates.
Mental health
Mental health
fromAlleywatch
1 day ago

Spring Health Acquires Alma to Address Care Continuity in Mental Health

Spring Health acquired Alma to integrate Alma’s clinician-insurance platform, expanding access to personalized, connected mental health care at scale while retaining Alma’s CEO.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Caring for Your Grandchildren Is Good for Your Brain

Caring for grandchildren is associated with better memory and verbal fluency and slower cognitive decline in grandmothers, independent of care frequency or type.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
21 hours ago

How to Stop Worrying About Things You Can't Control

Worry is a protective emotional and physiological response that focuses attention and motivates preparation, but it becomes harmful when it fixates on uncontrollable outcomes.
fromPsychology Today
19 hours ago

Exercise Alone Is Not an Effective Treatment for Depression

That sounds impressive; however, the devil is in the details that the popular media completely ignored. For example, only 11 of those studies were focused on depression. The authors concluded that exercise had a medium effect on depression. It is impossible to know how a "medium" effect compares with drug therapy since the studies were not head-to-head comparisons. The study also reported that exercise benefited many other health conditions, including HIV or kidney disease, various mental disorders, and cancers.
Mental health
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who retire without these 7 things in place usually regret it within the first year - Silicon Canals

Successful retirement requires more than money; cultivating purpose, structure, and seven specific elements before leaving work prevents regret, depression, and health decline.
Mental health
fromVulture
1 day ago

Bruce Willis 'Doesn't Know' He Has Dementia

Bruce Willis has frontotemporal dementia and does not recognize his condition due to anosognosia, while his wife and caregiver describes adapting to their changed connection.
Mental health
fromZDNET
1 day ago

I bricked my iPhone to prevent doomscrolling - and accidentally fixed my life

Excessive daily phone use and social media scrolling displaces meaningful activities, worsens mood, and leads to cyclical app deletion and reinstallation.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology says people who feel empty inside often display these 8 oddly specific behaviors without realizing it - Silicon Canals

Mindless scrolling, constant external validation seeking, and filling silence with noise are behaviors that often signal emotional emptiness and attempts to mask an inner void.
fromBustle
1 day ago

I Didn't Realize My Mental Health Would Cost $20,000 a Year

Sometimes, you don't need to think about your brain. It just... runs. You wake up, remember your passwords (mostly), answer emails without crying (ideally), sleep at night instead of staring at the ceiling replaying a weird thing you said in 2016 (actually), and generally move through the day without feeling panicked, sluggish, or sad.
Mental health
#adhd
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Shadows We Carry

Internalized shadows from historical oppression reshape identity and belonging, causing people to feel unseen, excessive, or inauthentic across different social spaces.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

What Therapists Can Do That AI Never Will

Repairing ruptures through listening, acknowledgment, and apology strengthens therapeutic connection and enables progress, especially for clients wounded by narcissistic parental dynamics.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

When Memory Worries Deserve Attention

Most people will forget a name, misplace their phone, or lose track of a conversation at some point. Usually, those moments pass without much thought. But for many adults, especially as they age, small lapses can trigger a much deeper fear: Is this the beginning of cognitive decline? As a neurologist, I hear this concern often. And as a researcher, I have learned something important: Worry about cognition and cognitive disease are not the same thing.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Keep Your Pen Moving: 6 Science-Backed Benefits of Gratitude

You've just had a crummy day, and you wish you hadn't. Your first instinct is to pick up the phone, call your best friend, and complain. But you also know deep down that you want to be more positive. You know that complaining emphasizes the negative in your life, and you'd like to create a shift for yourself. You recall that you started a gratitude journal, and when you use it, you find you really enjoy noticing the good things more than the bad.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Survey of over-50s women finds almost two in three struggle with mental health

Almost two in three women over 50 in the UK struggle with their mental health as they deal with menopause, relationship breakdowns and changes to their appearance, a survey has found. Brain fog, parents dying, children leaving home and financial pressures can also trigger difficulties such as sleeping problems, feeling anxious or overwhelmed, and a loss of zest for life.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

When Emotions Feel Out of Control in ADHD, BPD, and PTSD

Emotional dysregulation involves sudden, intense, persistent emotional responses that feel uncontrollable, often caused by brain-function differences, stress, or trauma.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology says people who check everything multiple times before leaving usually grew up in these 7 household environments - Silicon Canals

Repetitive checking behaviors often originate in childhood household dynamics that foster uncertainty, leading to lifelong coping routines around security and control.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

To Medicate or Not To Medicate Your Child or Teenager

Every day, many thousands of parents across the U.S. face the difficult question of whether to place their child or teenager on a psychotropic medication. Receiving a diagnosis of a mental disorder can be scary and confusing, for the youth as well as their parents/caretakers. What is ADHD? Depression? Anxiety? OCD? Bipolar? What are the available treatments? Do we have to use medications to treat the symptoms?
Mental health
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

If these 7 scenarios trigger you more than they should, you likely had a parent who loved you conditionally - Silicon Canals

Childhood conditional love makes adults equate criticism and disappointment with personal worth, causing chronic approval-seeking, anxiety, and disproportionate reactions to everyday feedback.
Mental health
fromFast Company
2 days ago

This is how Gen Z is rewriting the parenting playbook at work

Gen Z parents set firmer work-life boundaries, prompting workplace shifts as younger parents prioritize personal time over immediate work requests.
Mental health
fromFortune
2 days ago

The midlife crisis is only getting worse in the US | Fortune

Middle-aged Americans experience higher levels of loneliness, depression, and cognitive decline than peers in many other modern nations.
Mental health
fromBustle
1 day ago

My Acne Gave Me "Skinpostor Syndrome"

Living with persistent acne creates daily anxiety, shapes personal and professional decisions, and imposes significant emotional and financial burdens.
Mental health
fromEntrepreneur
1 day ago

Hustle Culture Is Outdated-Here's What Actually Scales a Business

Relentless hustle yields short-term wins but causes burnout, inconsistency, and unscalable growth; sustainable businesses require teams, systems and structured effort.
Mental health
fromTiny Buddha
3 days ago

What Happened When I Gave Myself Permission to Choose - Tiny Buddha

Rigid eating-disorder rules hyperactivate the nervous system, trapping individuals and impeding recovery; flexibility and choice help restore safety and autonomy.
Mental health
fromwww.bbc.com
3 days ago

'What if I just started shouting?' - when to worry about intrusive thoughts

Intrusive thoughts are unwanted, distressing cognitions that can become obsessions and trigger compulsive rituals, affecting adolescents and young adults with rising prevalence.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

When Faced With Liars, Skepticism Can Help

Abusive cultures use sustained lies and gaslighting to destabilize targets; strengthen your brain's lie-detection strategies to protect mental health.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Kintsugi: The Japanese Art of Being Remade

Kintsugi 金継ぎ is known as the Japanese art of putting broken things back together, like broken pottery, using materials mixed with powdered gold and other elements. Instead of hiding damage, this technique celebrates the restoration of an object once viewed as broken, flawed, or imperfect. This same process can be seen as a metaphor for addiction recovery. Even for people with addiction who willingly choose recovery, there's an element of being remade that can't be ignored. Addicts often go through a period of denial.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Sexual Abuse in Intimate Relationships: Beyond Coercion

Intimate partner sexual abuse commonly uses coercion, entitlement, painful acts, humiliation, and strangulation, eroding victims' safety, self-worth, and well-being.
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Do virtues like being compassionate increase your well-being?

Virtues such as compassion, patience, and self-control may be beneficial not only for others but also for oneself, according to new research my team and I published in the Journal of Personality in December 2025. Philosophers from Aristotle to al-Fārābī, a 10th-century scholar in what is now Iraq, have argued that virtue is vital for well-being. Yet others, such as Thomas Hobbes and Friedrich Nietzsche, have argued the opposite: Virtue offers no benefit to oneself and is good only for others.
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.scientificamerican.com
2 days ago

Psychiatrists plan to overhaul the mental health bibleand change how we define disorder'

The DSM will shift toward biomarker-based, more scientific diagnostic criteria and may rename the manual to emphasize "scientific" over "statistical".
Mental health
fromwww.npr.org
3 days ago

It's the foundation of psychiatric diagnosis. And it's about to get a makeover

The DSM will become an online, continuously updated "living document" with broader stakeholder input, replacing slow, print-based revisions.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

3 Tell-Tale Signs of Invisible Growth

Some of the most meaningful forms of growth an individual can experience happen beneath their conscious awareness. Typically, it registers first as discomfort, ambiguity, or even a sense of regression. When growth is happening at a person's core level, they're likely to underestimate it or misinterpret it entirely. As a psychologist, I often see individuals who assume they're "stuck" precisely when some of the most important internal shifts are underway. This is because the mind rarely announces these changes with clarity.
Mental health
#karamo-brown
fromBuzzFeed
6 days ago
Mental health

New Alleged Details Are Emerging About Karamo Brown's Falling-Out With The "Queer Eye" Cast

fromBuzzFeed
6 days ago
Mental health

New Alleged Details Are Emerging About Karamo Brown's Falling-Out With The "Queer Eye" Cast

fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

Why some people always feel left out, no matter how hard they try to fit in - Silicon Canals

When I lost my best friend from college to a slow drift, I spent months analyzing what went wrong. Had I said something offensive? Not been supportive enough? The truth was simpler and more painful: I'd been so focused on fitting into my new work environment that I'd stopped showing up authentically in our friendship. This constant performance of trying to belong is utterly draining.
Mental health
Mental health
fromKqed
2 weeks ago

San Francisco Airport's Fear of Flying Clinic Welcomes Nervous Passengers Aboard | KQED

Exposure therapy and cognitive reframing help people with fear of flying manage anxiety through gradual sensory exposure and changing catastrophic beliefs.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Why the Grief Ripples So Deeply When an Advocate Dies

'They're dead.' In disbelief, my response was unfiltered. 'What?' Followed by the F word. A wave of emotion rushed through me. My chest tightened. My body went cold. I could not immediately find the words to offer condolences, not because I did not feel them deeply, but because inside, my many parts were experiencing a collective shock. When you live with dissociative identity disorder (DID), news like this does not land in one place. It ricochets across all parts within.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPortland Mercury
2 days ago

Your Objective Is?

A bus rider becomes unsettled and fixated when another passenger repeatedly stares and taunts, interpreting the behavior as intrusive and incomprehensible.
Mental health
fromYoga Journal
1 week ago

I Went 7 Days Without Electric Light. Here's What I Learned in the Dark.

Reducing exposure to electric light at night restores natural circadian rhythms and enables the body to wind down, improving sleep onset and duration.
#maternal-mental-health
fromBustle
2 days ago

On TikTok, People Are Caring For Their Mental Health With "Stupid Walks"

On the app, @morganegust said she needed to "go on a stupid little walk for her stupid little mental health" - a funny and relatable phrase that's part of this trend. Despite being in a sour mood, she stomped out the door and down the street. In the next clip, she showed herself smiling and spinning in a circle. "It's extra annoying when the walk actually helps," she said.
Mental health
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Dear Abby: I find showering unpleasant, so I don't do it. How do I know if this is problem?

What is troubling me is I've always had an issue with taking a shower and all the oil and dirt flowing down my body. I think it's gross. Besides my resistance to actually taking a shower, I hate getting out of the shower and feeling cold, and trying to get dressed partially wet. When I've been in relationships, I force myself to shower, or I wipe down with hospital-type wipes.
Mental health
fromCbsnews
3 days ago

Brooklyn program helps Holocaust survivors confront trauma and loneliness

Marat Rivkin, 88, has only one photograph of himself with his mother from World War II. It was taken in 1941 at a Soviet train station, so he could get help finding her if they were separated. "My mother ran in and said, 'The war has begun.' I didn't know what she meant, but she was crying and told me and my grandmother to begin packing," Rivkin told Brooklyn reporter Hannah Kliger in Russian.
Mental health
fromApartment Therapy
2 days ago

This One Color May Help You Focus Better at Home, According to Experts

Choosing the right paint color can have a huge impact on your capacity for concentration, according to the experts. "Color can be a powerful, everyday way to support mental health because it speaks directly to the nervous system," says Hillary Schoninger, LCSW, an individual and family psychotherapist based in Chicago. "When we perceive color, our brain processes it as information and responds - sometimes with comfort and ease, and at other times with stimulation."
Mental health
#music-industry
fromConsequence
2 days ago
Mental health

Steve Earle, Joy Oladokun, Questlove Play Backline's B-LINE Hotline Launch Party in New York City: Photos

fromConsequence
2 days ago
Mental health

Steve Earle, Joy Oladokun, Questlove Play Backline's B-LINE Hotline Launch Party in New York City: Photos

Mental health
fromEsquire
3 days ago

Is It Time to Quit Alcohol for Good?

A seasoned surgeon's decades-long alcoholism culminated in a near-suicide after relapse triggered by injury and extensive drinking during a family holiday.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Emotional Brain in the Time of Collective Crisis

Chronic societal crises layered onto personal trauma chronically activate ancient emotional brain systems, undermining pleasure, motivation, connection, and emotional regulation.
Mental health
fromFast Company
3 days ago

This company pioneered virtual therapy for OCD. Now it wants to do the same for PTSD

NOCD acquired Rebound Health and formed parent company Noto to integrate PTSD and trauma care into its AI-powered telehealth platform, expanding specialty therapy access.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Hidden Costs of Compulsive Caring

Chronic caretaking can become a central identity and relational pattern that organizes intimacy and self-worth, with emotional costs and reduced reciprocity.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Jordan Peterson says if you want to stay mentally strong, stop doing these 8 habits that weaken your mind - Silicon Canals

Mental strength requires confronting uncomfortable issues, stopping avoidance and self-deception, and replacing self-defeating habits with responsible action to build resilience.
fromMail Online
4 days ago

What daydreaming REALLY means... and why it can be harmful

Maladaptive daydreaming is when you're listening to music, watching a movie, or just staring into space while imagining different scenarios in your head,' she explained in a recent TikTok video. 'It is a form of dissociation where your brain is imagining alternate realities to cope with how scary your actual reality is,' she added. LePera explained that often in these scenarios, people will replay situations where you have the 'perfect response' to a past uncomfortable interaction.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

How Scientists Finally Learned to Measure the Placebo Effect

Placebo effects can produce real, substantial improvements that make it difficult to determine whether depression treatments produce true therapeutic effects.
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Australia's beach culture is very fatphobic': the summertime rise in body dissatisfaction

As a teenager, Davis was always striving to be thinner, obsessed with tracking calories and terrified to date or be intimate with anybody in case they commented on her body. Even going to the beach with friends was fraught. I'd wait for them to go into the ocean first, because I felt really insecure, she says. Some days I'd cancel and say I was sick.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Emotional Impact of Being Admitted to a Psychiatric Unit

Inpatient psychiatric care can stabilize acute psychosis and prevent harm but can leave traumatic memories, shame, and isolation that often require processing and sharing to heal.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Recovery Gap: Your Bounce Back Is the Best Predictor of Burnout

Burnout manifests as a gradual widening decision-action delay; recovery time and decision velocity predict capacity, so monitor response speed not mood.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says if you struggle to relax on days off, you may be carrying these 7 "productivity beliefs" from childhood - Silicon Canals

Childhood beliefs tying worth to achievement often make adults equate productivity with value, undermining true rest and contributing to burnout.
Mental health
fromConsequence
3 days ago

An Open Letter to Kanye West as He Asks Forgiveness

Apology and mental-health disclosure require sustained, concrete actions to repair harm from years of antisemitic and hateful public behavior.
Mental health
fromFast Company
4 days ago

A neuroscientist's 10 signs you're doing better in life than you think

Many people misjudge their success due to 'success dysmorphia', feeling inadequate despite objective progress; recognizing achievements rather than chasing milestones fosters joy.
Mental health
fromForbes
3 days ago

Why Building Friendships At Work Can Help Employees Feel Connected

Workplace loneliness is rising, reducing employee engagement, well-being, and productivity while costing employers significant money in absenteeism, healthcare, and turnover.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Psychological Theories Follow Social Trends

Psychiatry and psychology mirror prevailing societal values and historical ideologies, shaping theories, treatments, and research priorities across different eras.
Mental health
fromwww.mercurynews.com
4 days ago

Opinion: It took a village' to heal her trauma and homelessness. Will California keep funding this help?

Trauma-informed community services, consistent care, and compassionate housing support enabled recovery from long-term abuse, addiction, homelessness, and estrangement.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

How to Turn the Dial Up on Your Happiness

Amplifying recall of positive experiences increases daily happiness and counters depressive focus by intensifying attention on positive feelings throughout the day.
fromFast Company
4 days ago

80% of employees struggle with this hidden workplace bias. Here's what employers can do

Around the office, people clutch coffee like a life raft, waiting for their brains to come online and cursing the 8 a.m. meeting. And the cheerful colleague. But at least they got in early enough to find parking and grab coffee before it ran out-this time. Now: which person are you? The early riser, or the one watching them, wondering why you can never feel that awake at this hour no matter how hard you try?
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Exercise Works as Well as Medication and Therapy for Depression

Depression remains one of the world's leading causes of disability, affecting more than 280 million people globally. Antidepressant medications and psychological therapy are the go-to treatments. But medications can be expensive and lead to side effects, and therapy is not accessible to everyone. Now, an updated systematic review published this month in the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews finds exercise is equally effective at reducing symptoms of depression compared to medicine or talk therapy.
Mental health
Mental health
fromBustle
3 days ago

On TikTok, People Swear By Writing A "Worry List"

Writing a daily worry list that pairs worries with worst-case outcomes and later records actual results reduces rumination and reveals how many worries never materialize.
fromABC News
3 days ago

Jury selection begins in landmark trial on social media, kids

Borrowing heavily from the behavioral and neurobiological techniques used by slot machines and exploited by the cigarette industry, defendants deliberately embedded in their products an array of design features aimed at maximizing youth engagement to drive advertising revenue,
Mental health
fromwww.npr.org
4 days ago

A kids' guide to phone-free fun, from the author of 'The Anxious Generation'

Haidt's arguments and approach have been challenged by critics, many of whom point out that causation is not correlation, that his work ignores the many other potential factors at play affecting mental health. Yet, The Anxious Generation has undeniably had a significant impact. Haidt is leading, in his own terms, a "movement," which we have already seen translate into legislation in many states around the U.S. limiting the use of phones in schools.
Mental health
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