Natural Remedies: Mother Nature's Little Helpers
In a clinical trial that got a lot of publicity last year, the herb St.-John's-wort failed to work better than a placebo in treating severe depression. The study also showed that Zoloft, one of the most popular prescription antidepressants, did no better than a placebo either, but that result attracted little attention. In the real world, people do not take St.-John's-wort for severe depression--they use it for mild to moderate conditions. Zoloft, on the other hand, is considered a powerful weapon in the ongoing war on mental illness.
With good reason, a lot of people have questions about the efficacy of psychiatric medications, as well as concerns about their side effects and overuse, especially in children. This has led many consumers to explore alternative therapies, most of which have yet to get the fair clinical trials they deserve. But it is safe to say that many work for obvious reasons, some of them so simple they are often overlooked by psychiatrists, psychologists and researchers.
Take aerobic exercise. Not only is it a safe and effective treatment for depression, but it has many other health benefits as well, from improving cardiovascular and immune functions to controlling weight. Aerobic exercise works, in part, by stimulating the release of endorphins, a class of endogenous antidepressants made in the brain. It both treats and prevents depression in susceptible individuals, and I prescribe it frequently. For best results, try to get 45 minutes of sustained aerobic activity an average of five days a week. Any activity that raises your heart rate and gets you breathing fast will do. Walking is fine if you do it quickly enough or include some uphill time.
Another simple intervention I often recommend is breath work. Breath control is the most powerful method I have found to reduce anxiety, even in its most severe form of panic disorder. Conventional drugs suppress anxiety but often cause significant side effects and dependence. I have found it is impossible to be anxious while breathing deeply, slowly, quietly and regularly. By working on those qualities in your breathing, you can develop a practical technique for preventing or cutting short an anxiety attack. Breathing exercises derived from yoga are even more effective. With practice, breath work quiets down the nervous system. This not only blunts anxiety but also lowers blood pressure, slows the heart rate, improves circulation and digestion, and helps protect the body from the damaging effects of stress.
Breath work is a natural segue to meditation, because the simplest meditation technique is concentration on the breath. The association of meditation with Eastern religion is an obstacle for some Americans, but many nonreligious forms exist. In essence, meditation is nothing other than focused awareness. Although it can be used as a relaxation technique, I find it most valuable as a method of restructuring the mind, breaking habitual patterns of thought and creating seeds of balance to oppose erratic mood swings. Over time it can provide great mental-health benefits: relief from ordinary anxiety and depression, better rest and sleep, and increased resistance to disturbing influences on emotional equilibrium. Meditation has also proved quite valuable in preparing patients for surgery (see following story).
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