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Explore the definitions, roots, and impacts of stress and anxiety in women's health. Learn about biochemical, psychological, social, and structural influences. Discover how to make positive changes to combat stress and anxiety effectively.
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Stress and Anxiety:Time for a Change Women’s Health Series September 29, 2009
What we’ll cover today: • Definitions • Agents of Disease: • Biochemical / Physiological root of anxiety • Psychological root of anxiety • What Makes Populations Vulnerable: • Social roots of anxiety • Structural roots of anxiety • Making a Change!
Definition: Stress Stress is our own mental or physical response to external changes and difficulties
Definition: Anxiety Persistent stress that is not resolved through coping or adaptation, deemed distress, may lead to anxiety or withdrawal behaviour (depression). Anxiety is a psychological and physiological state characterized by cognitive, somatic, emotional, and behavioural components. These components combine to create an unpleasant feeling that is typically associated with uneasiness, fear, or worry.
AGENTS OF DISEASE • Biochemical / Physiological • Psychological
Biochemical / Physiological Fight or Flight Alarm is the first stage. When the threat or stressor is identified or realized, the body's stress response is a state of alarm.
Biochemical / Physiological Resistance is the second stage. If the stressor persists, it becomes necessary to attempt some means of coping with the stress. Although the body begins to try to adapt to the strains or demands of the environment, the body cannot keep this up indefinitely, so its resources are gradually depleted.
Biochemical / Physiological Exhaustion is the third and final stage. At this point, all of the body's resources are eventually depleted and the body is unable to maintain normal function. • Ulcers • Depression • Diabetes • Digestive troubles • Cardiovascular disease • Mental health problems
Psychological • Primary Appraisal • Secondary Appraisal
Cognitive Behavioural Therapy • Wrongful thinking / negative thinking • “A talent for worrying really well.”
“This limited thinking focus can have detrimental effects, for ‘by obscuring the role of external factors, these biases may reinforce women’s often highly developed inward focus and self-critical attitude, and ultimately may amplify rather than diminish depression’”
WHAT MAKES POPULATIONS VULNERABLE • Social roots of anxiety • Structural roots of anxiety
Social Roots of Anxiety • Class position • “Working class kids show prolonged rises in cortisol under any kind of stress while upper class kids showed a quick spike and decline”
Social Roots of Anxiety • Change in social context and social location • Forced displacement • Immigration
Social Roots of Anxiety • Job security • Housing • Nutrition • Childcare • Care-giving
Structural roots of anxiety • “Rich countries have reached a level of development beyond which further rises in material living standards do not help reduce health or social problems” • Critical analysis of the “stress effects of social status” and how they “vary according to the nature of the dominance hierarchy and the quality of social relations”
Superstructure of Society • Conditioning & Social Location • Power • Ability to exert control
Systemic Racism & Patriarchy • “High frequency, low intensity insults … where one is constantly forced to make strategic decisions… “Am I walking so slowly that the cop will think I am loitering or am I walking so fast he will think I am running from the scene of a crime?” • Commodification of women & constant “social evaluative threats”
Incorporate All 4 Perspectives • Biochemical / Physiological • Psychological • Social • Structural
COLLECTIVE APPROACH • Sharing stress reduction techniques • “Friendship Networks” • Demand adequate access to services • Community organization for social change