Work, family and
social stresses combine to throw our body's natural defense systems out of sync.
Not exact matches
Pioneering studies by Dean Ornish, M.D., called the Lifestyle Heart Trial,
combined a plant - based diet with exercise,
stress reduction, yoga,
social support and love, and cessation of smoking to reverse advanced heart disease.
On top of all that, the exigencies of an always - on culture and pressure to be liked / followed on
social media
combine to create a lot of potential
stress and pitfalls that simply weren't there for previous generations — this seems to be borne out in recent scary statistics about mental ill - health among young people in the UK.
The interaction of both
social (e.g., access to food) and biophysical (e.g., drought)
stresses thus
combine to aggravate critical
stress periods (e.g., during and after ENSO events).
Sudden life
stress, environmental cues, and
social networks can all
combine to create powerful agents for relapse.
Thus, there is some evidence that the maturational changes that occur in middle childhood
combined with children's increased exposure to
social situations require major adjustments in parental expectations which, in turn, may be associated with higher risk for
stress compared to both early years and adolescence (Orr et al. 1993).
Combined with
social, educational, and discipline problems, children are experiencing higher levels of
stress, anxiety, and depression.