Want to Improve Your Health? Focus on Reducing Stress, Not Weight

Stress, and stress-related illnesses and symptoms are on the rise, and there’s no doubt that COVID-19 has compounded what was already a huge problem for society. But rather than taking steps to reduce stress and manage anxiety, society is distracted by dieting and the pursuit weight loss, which more often than not, backfires and worsens a person’s health over the long term, rather than improves it.

In this article, I will explain why stress is so damaging for your health and illustrate how many of the health problems we associate with weight, can be alleviated or managed by tackling mental health rather than fixating on dieting or weight loss.

To start with, here are some recent statistics on stress (Mental Health Foundation, 2018):

  • 74% of UK adults have felt so stressed at some point over the last year they felt overwhelmed or unable to cope.

  • 81% of women said this compared to 67 percent of men.

  • 83% of 18-24-year-olds said this compared to 65 percent of people aged 55 and over. 

So, we can see that while stress can and does affect anyone, it disproportionately affects more women and young people. 

Stress and mental health

In the same study, it was found that stress can have very serious consequences for our mental health:

  • 32% of adults said that they had experienced suicidal feelings because of stress

  • 35% of women said this compared to 29 percent of men.

  • 39% of 18-24-year-olds said this compared to 25 percent of adults aged 55 and over.

  • 16% of adults said they had self-harmed because of stress.

  • 18% of women said this compared to 13 percent of men.

  • 29% of 18-24-year-olds said this compared to 6 percent of adults aged 55 and over.

Anxiety and stress

Anxiety as an emotion, is a normal response to stress or danger and is often called the ‘flight or fight’ response. This process involves adrenaline being quickly pumped through the body enabling it to cope with whatever catastrophe lies ahead. This is an evolutionary response, which as you can imagine, would have been lifesaving back in our ancestor's cave dwelling days, which would have entailed having to run from wild animals and rival tribes.

In today's world however, the source of stress (a ‘stressor’) is rarely a life-threatening situation and is more likely to be an ongoing problem. Anxiety disorders arise when our response to a stressor is out of proportion to the actual danger of the situation, or indeed is generated when there is no danger present. 

Mental health issues, including Anxiety disorders are very common. As reported by the UK mental health charity, Mind:

  • Approximately 1 in 4 people in the UK will experience a mental health problem each year (McManus, 2009).

  • In England, 1 in 6 people report experiencing a common mental health problem, such as anxiety and depression in any given week (McManus S, 2016).

Stress and the biological ‘fight or flight’ response

Before we dig into how stress impacts our health and lives and the causes of stress, it's useful to understand how our bodies experience stress on a biological level. If you really don't like biology, feel free to skip onto the next section, but personally, I've found understanding my body's reaction helps me notice when I'm showing the first physiological signs of stress and manage it more effectively.

The ‘flight or fight’ response is the term given to the biological process our brain initiates when we come up against a threat or perceived threat. It's a survival instinct, which is quite simply in place to get us to either physically fight a threat, such as an attacker, or ‘take flight’, i.e. run away from a threat, like a mudslide or tornado. 

The stages of the ‘flight or fight’ response

The ‘fight or flight’ response begins the moment we come face to face with a trigger. This might be a bear, an oncoming lorry, exam, ringing phone or even your partner’s clothes dumped on the bedroom floor. 

The response then begins in the brain, specifically in a part called the ‘amygdala’. This then triggers a neural response in another part called the ‘hypothalamus’, which then activates the pituitary gland. The pituitary gland then secretes adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH).

At the same time, the adrenal gland is activated, and this releases adrenaline (epinephrine) into the blood stream and the neurotransmitter, noradrenaline (norepinephrine) into the brain.

This triggers the release of cortisol, which increases our blood pressure, blood sugar levels and suppresses our immune and digestive systems. This part is key, and we'll come back to this in a moment when we discuss the impact that stress has on our health.

Our liver cells produce additional glucose and cortisol turns fatty acids into to energy, this is to give us a boost of energy to either fight or run away from the threat (Mariotti, 2015).

The Stages of the ‘Fight or Flight’ stress response.

Physical effects of the stress response

When this response is triggered, our body experiences a series of physical changes to adapt to the situation (more specifically, to prepare our body to either fight or take flight). These include:

  • Our pupils dilate 

  • Our heart rate increases

  • Our face becomes flushed

  • We might experience shaking 

  • We can experience tunnel vision and hearing loss

  • Our bladder relaxes (we might wet ourselves)

  • Our digestive system slows

  • Our mouth might become dry

Try to look out for these signs next time something triggers you, such as an argument at work. You may experience many of these signs as part of the fight or flight response.

The physiological changes that occur during the fight or flight response are activated to give the body increased strength and speed in anticipation of fighting or running. 

Some of the specific physiological changes and their functions include:

  • Increased blood flow to the muscles activated by diverting blood flow from other parts of the body.

  • Increased blood pressure, heart rate, blood sugars, and fats to supply the body with extra energy.

  • The blood clotting function of the body speeds up to prevent excessive blood loss in the event of an injury sustained during the response.

  • Increased muscle tension to provide the body with extra speed and strength.

As you can image, this response is incredibly effective and life saving for reacting to immediate threats and danger to our life, but, as I'm sure you can already imagine by now, exposure to prolonged stress can cause a lot of issues for our bodies as they remain in this response for the long term (Mental Health Foundation, 2019).

Immediate stress vs prolonged stress

Our body's biological response to threats (triggers/stressors) is incredibly effective and life saving for reacting to immediate threats and danger to our life. It's designed to be a short-term response which then has a resolution.

For example, imagine that you're driving along a narrow dark country road and see a lorry heading straight towards you, you panic that you're about to have a head-on collision, so your fight or flight response kicks in, allowing you to respond immediately by swerving out the way or slamming your breaks on.

Once the lorry has passed, or you have stopped at the side of the road, completely unharmed and once again safe, the level of cortisol and adrenaline secreted during the fight or flight response begins to decrease and your body slowly returns to its normal state. Your digestive systems pick up again, your muscle relax, your heart rate returns to normal, your blood pressure lowers, and your blood sugar levels return to normal (Mayo Clinic, 2019).

So, what happens when the stressor, or trigger isn't something that can be quickly resolved?  

Exposure to prolonged stress can cause a lot of issues for our bodies as they remain in the 'fight or flight' state for the long term, with many of our systems suppressed (including our immune system, digestive system, sexual responses) and our heart rate, blood pressure and blood sugar remaining raised. 

The health impact of ongoing stress

As you will see from this list, stress impacts pretty much every area of our body:

  • Mental health problems, such as depression, anxiety, and personality disorders

  • Cardiovascular disease, including heart disease, high blood pressure, abnormal heart rhythms, heart attacks, and stroke

  • Total loss of or increase of appetite 

  • Storage of fat tissue, usually around our middle

  • Headaches

  • Menstrual problems

  • Sexual dysfunction, such as impotence and premature ejaculation in men and loss of sexual desire in both men and women

  • Skin and hair problems, such as acne, psoriasis, and eczema, and permanent hair loss

  • Gastrointestinal problems, such as GERD, gastritis, ulcerative colitis, and irritable colon, Irritable Bowel Syndrome, nausea, and indigestion

  • Sleep problems

  • Memory problems and difficulty concentrating 

  • Fatigue 

  • Loss of desire to exercise 

  • Increase of coughs, colds, and flu-like symptoms 

Looking at the impact prolonged stress has on our health, it's clear that taking the time to learn how to effectively reduce our stress levels and manage anxiety, is hugely beneficial for our health (Web MD, 2019). This is why, alongside helping students and clients improve their relationship with food and body image, I also teach stress and anxiety management techniques, many of which you can find in my new book: The Calm Mindset Workbook, out now and available from Amazon.

Karen Lynne Oliver

Karen Lynne Oliver is the founding director of Beyond The Bathroom Scale ®. She is a former social worker, retraining as a trauma-informed therapist specialising in eating disorders and body image.

https://www.beyondthebathroomscale.co.uk
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