Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • I'm doctor make events welcome to this visual lecture answering the question

  • what is the single most important thing we can do to manage your stress

  • a few years ago we moved her family to France for three months was a time the

  • European Cup football championships and So we would take our kids to a local bar to watch

  • the game on TV

  • watching the moods of people from different countries

  • swing from pure joy to total anxiety to despair and back again

  • was as entertaining as the game itself and I wondered if there is any scientific

  • analysis so how this can a stress affects people

  • it turns out there has been a study in the quarterfinal the 1996 championship

  • between the French and Dutch teams

  • a draw at the end of overtime resulted in a sudden death penalty shoot out

  • which is won by the French when researchers look back to see if there were health changes

  • on that day

  • it turned out there was a relative increase in the risk of death from a

  • heart attack by about

  • 50 percent among the Dutch men on the day and the match compared with the five

  • days on either side in the match

  • there is no such effect on French men or woman from

  • either country for that matter so this story striking because it it's about one

  • event end and really one negative health outcomes

  • stress but in reality stress is very complex

  • multiple factors multiple outcomes physiologists sees stress increase blood

  • Heart rate or changes in the chemicals that modulate the immune system

  • pressure

  • the social worker sees vulnerability with the compromised social networks coping

  • and problem solving skills

  • the doctor sees increase visits estimated that up to 70 percent a

  • primary care visits are stress-related

  • worse health outcomes bad self treatment with alcohol and drugs

  • gateways to depression and anxiety and of course the worst quality of life

  • these perspectives represent the standard negative picture stress but

  • I believe we also see a positive side distress athletes were able to find a

  • stress level that is high but

  • but not too high for optimum performance executives are mothers or aid

  • workers who manage stress like a bicycle tire

  • they regulate enough pressure to keep rolling but not too much so that if

  • they hit a bump they explode

  • And to me this is really the most interesting question when we look at

  • stress and health under some people undergoing intense stress remain healthy

  • and even thrive in and what makes them stress resistant well I think the

  • answer it big include factors like how much control people feel they have in

  • their lives

  • their social network and I mean that the old sense of the word

  • openness to change attitudes like optimism self-care skills such as

  • exercising and

  • and humor and so on research on mental health

  • shows that we are sort of a bento box more severe mental health issues

  • in trying to figure out what works and what doesn't which is great but we've

  • done much less research and most common problem

  • stress and when it is steady its usually in the context of other diseases

  • so based on a current literature my pick for the single most effective treatment

  • for managing stress

  • is actually kind of a simple one change your thinking style

  • most people think stress is something that happens to us like a piece a steel

  • on a bridge that is constantly being stressed and then eventually stretched

  • this is a physical model but it's it's actually not a human model

  • that differences is stressed passes through a two-pound piece a tissue on

  • the top your face called your brain

  • so we see things like my job is stressful or my friend Sylvia is stressing

  • me out

  • but in fact we create the stress in our brains

  • your work or Sylvia isn’t stressful what you're thinking that brings a

  • stress your brain is

  • is a volume dial that can turn to stress out but

  • I think you can also track people think we're born a certain attitudes and and i

  • think is down but the truth is stress management is a skill that can be

  • Learned

  • doctor Mat Gulliksson and his colleagues and hoops

  • Sweden published a trial in 2011 in the Annals of Internal Medicine

  • falling over 400 people loosely woman that had significant her heart events such as

  • her attacker or bypass surgery

  • half the group received usual care and the other half got usual care plus

  • cognitive behavioral therapy or CBT

  • CBT has become an umbrella term

  • where you learn practical techniques such as problem solving relaxation and

  • and challenging common thinking trapped so for example

  • a negative filters so if five people say great job and one says nothing

  • and you think you blew it fortune-telling

  • I'm not going to that job interview that just reject me mind reading

  • a friend walks by without noticing any you assume he dislikes you now

  • polarizing are black and white thinking I feel might die if I bite into that piece a

  • cake

  • now I might as well eat the whole thing and so on

  • the thought record is then used to reframe your automatic thinking and a more

  • healthy thinking

  • as the American psychologist William James said over 100 years ago

  • the greatest weapon against stress is our ability to choose one thought

  • over another so the researchers want to see people could use these techniques to

  • reduce the daily experiences stress

  • time urgency and hostility in this so could that lead to better outcomes

  • so so not a drug not a diet not a stent

  • just changing the way you think the participants were followed for over seven

  • years

  • those that got the CBT had a forty-one percent reduction heart attacks

  • and at 28 percent lower death rate

  • the more CBT session a person attended the better they did

  • now another way to change your thinking style in order to reduce stress is

  • through the use of mindfulness techniques

  • mindful used to be more through it I will call the king by crowd but

  • the programs have actually become much more mainstream in fact my patient have

  • Heart attacks and chronic diseases now often taken mine from this course part

  • their treatment

  • and there's a growing evidence about its effectiveness a recent trial following

  • clinically depressed patients by doctor Zindel Segel College University of

  • Toronto is a good example

  • when the patient experience remission they were randomized to an

  • antidepressant

  • or placebo or mindfulness-based cognitive therapy

  • the results show that mindfulness was as protective against relapses medications

  • my sense is that the success from mindfulness is probably due to the fact that

  • combines many useful techniques for stress reduction

  • such as increased self-awareness involving a physical component like

  • breathing or muscle relaxation meditation

  • and perhaps most important in our busy world an emphasis on letting go of

  • distractions in being in the moment

  • mindfulness can give us ability to let go of worry and not get trapped in the anxious

  • leaped

  • perhaps less about changing the thought and in really more about choosing where

  • to place your attention

  • as a famous Austrian psychiatrist Victor Frankel pointed out between stimulus and

  • response

  • there's a space and I think mindfulness teaches us awareness so that space in

  • and that we have the power choice so another factor that the

  • research tells us that impacts your thinking style is your attitude

  • your outlook on life doctors Suzanne Kobasa and her colleagues from the University

  • Chicago look at this by following a natural experiment in the nineteen

  • eighties break up of the Ma Bell Telephone Company

  • the followed who coped well and who didn't and identified three key trait of those

  • who coped well

  • the first motion was commitment the stress resistant executives were

  • committed a different aspects of their lives

  • so even while facing uncertainty they stay committed to quality work in

  • engaging with family and friends their communities there

  • faith hobbies they saw

  • and I think we're committed to the bigger picture success

  • and this allowed them to weather the turbulence in in a specific area of

  • their lives

  • the second motion was control this is interesting

  • in that because its restructuring these executives actually had little control

  • in fact you might see their skill fighting stress is more about being a

  • let go of control

  • they could see that the sands were shifting and if they were too rigid in their

  • control over territory or department the main actually lose a bigger opportunity

  • or even their job other psychological research is focused on locus of

  • control or self efficacy

  • which is really the extent to which individuals believe they can control

  • events effected

  • and their competence or or ability to make change

  • the executives may have understood that a lot what was happening was out of their

  • control but they could adapt in

  • and I think you can choose and feel confident about what they could control

  • the third notion was change the stress resistant execs were able to limit their

  • self-importance and and see the change happening around them as a potential

  • stepping-stone

  • not a stumbling block

  • so as we come to the end of our story about what reduces stress

  • might be helpful to know that the research has shown that simply rating 0

  • distressed story

  • to make a big difference the act of giving coherence in

  • and I think reading your own personal narrative too stressful event in a

  • letter

  • can be an effective way of negating the stresses those events the classic

  • therapeutic letter writing exercise is writing a letter to somebody who

  • stresses you out

  • and then not posting it

  • finally like to leave you with this advice to improve your thinking style

  • think basics when I play tennis and things are going badly

  • which is often the case I forget about everything else to say

  • move your feet watch the ball that it

  • when things are stressful sometimes you need to keep it simple save yourself

  • I will keep a regular sleep routine I will avoiding crap

  • I will walk will mingle and and I think there's some early evidence for altruism

  • we're doing good as Abe Lincoln said

  • when I do good I feel good when I do bad I feel bad

  • and that is my religion and I’m often reminded about the power simplicity from

  • a

  • a lesson one of my patients taught me I did deliver bad news to him

  • and when I did he kind of shrugged his shoulders and said I’ll be ok

  • I followed the 90/10 rule 10 percent of how we do in life is based on what happens

  • to us and and ninety percent is how we respond

  • I think the same may be true stress to take a deep breath

  • think about your big picture commitment your sense of control

  • Your openness to change consider doing some homework on yourself refrain rethinking

  • redirect your attention maybe read a letter repeatedly the evidence shows

  • that people manage their stress well

  • they're better health outcomes for virtually any disease a may suffer from

  • and remember the challenges will always be out there that's life but

  • remember too that your thoughts and your added to our the key holders for the

  • stress you experience

  • not the traffic not your boss not your job not you neighbour

  • but you something you can improve your thinking

  • hope this helps thanks for listening

  • just

  • just

I'm doctor make events welcome to this visual lecture answering the question

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it