Articles

  • 2 weeks ago | health.com | Lindsay Curtis |Kathleen Daly

    bmanzurova / Getty Images Anxiety can cause many physical symptoms, including swallowing difficulties. It activates the fight-or-flight response, which releases stress hormones to prepare you for potential threats. It may cause your throat muscles to tense up, which can affect swallowing. This is known as functional dysphagia. With anxiety, you might feel throat tightness or feel like there's a lump in your throat. Some people become overly aware of their swallowing.

  • Jan 1, 2024 | bmjopen.bmj.com | Brian Lawson |Gabriel Escobar |Kathleen Daly

    DiscussionUsing population-level data from an integrated health system and robust methods (AIPW), we found a protective effect of an outpatient management programme for COVID-19 which was implemented very early in the pandemic to manage patients at home and expedite their referral to acute care when needed. Patients followed by CHCT were older and had higher comorbidity burden, which argues against the possibility of cherry picking.

  • Oct 15, 2023 | health.com | Sarah Schuster |Kathleen Daly

    While pursuing goals often comes with challenges, people who self-sabotage engage in behaviors and hold beliefs that get in their own way. Despite knowing which actions might help them achieve their goals, they are drawn to do the opposite—unconsciously or consciously participating in habits that make them less likely to succeed.1Self-sabotage can be situational (e.g., a student is great at sports but self-sabotages academically), or part of a larger pattern of behavior.

  • Oct 11, 2023 | health.com | Laura Dorwart |Kathleen Daly

    Extroverts are more interested in, energized by, and oriented towards the external world–i.e. people, things, and activities–than in the inner world of contemplation and reflection.1 Extroversion is one of the “big five” personality traits in the five-factor personality model, as first popularized by psychologists in the 1980s.

  • Oct 10, 2023 | health.com | Sarah Bradley |Kathleen Daly

    Cortisol is a hormone produced in the adrenal glands that controls many different body functions, including regulating blood sugar and metabolism, supporting immune function, controlling blood pressure and inflammation, and managing the stress response.1 Although stress and some medications, like steroids, can increase cortisol levels, the most common causes of high cortisol are disorders of the pituitary or adrenal glands, benign tumors of these glands, or tumors in other parts of the body.2...

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