Anxiety Disorders

Anxiety Disorders

In the 1980s, some wardens started painting their cells with a shade of pink dubbed "Baker-Miller Pink."
It’s estimated that one-in-three women and one-in-five men have an episode of major depression by the age of 65.
Peaky Blinders Tommy Shelby
The Netflix show about a Birmingham crime family and their personal demons concluded earlier this month. 
Types of therapy are about as different as the people who use it.
Your bites will heal, but will you ever sleep well again after an infestation of bloodsucking parasites?
Chatter represents the dark side of your inner voice.
Your inner voice can be the devil on your shoulder or the angel. It depends on where your focus lies.
gene editing alcoholism
An experiment in rats suggests that gene editing may be a treatment for anxiety and alcoholism in adults who were exposed to binge-drinking in their adolescence.
hoarding
Hoarders know their habits are abnormal, and yet they cannot help themselves. Maybe you can help them.
anxiety medication
Disulfiram is an FDA-approved drug for the treatment of chronic alcoholism. It might also serve as anti-anxiety medication.
Much of the discussion began during the pandemic, which really brought mental health issues to the forefront.
The study shows that it’s possible to map the wildly subjective psychedelic experiences to specific brain regions.
zuranolone
Zuranolone might help people feel better sooner than if they were relying on standard treatment alone.
city syndromes
Stockholm Syndrome is the most famous of 10 psychological disorders named after world cities. Most relate to tourism or hostage-taking.
A woman doing therapy on her laptop
The use of AI within mental health services could be a game-changer.
Mental health, healing and pulling together were key themes of 2021, according to the world’s most popular search engine. Google processes billions of requests every day and its Year in Search […]
Just don't expect the apocalypse to look like it does in the movies.
dopamine nation
Experiencing too much pleasure and not enough pain may yield counterintuitive consequences.