Does anyone have a career in stress?
May 21st, 2009 | by Anthony |nykhan27 asked:
If so can you answer these questions for me:
1. What types of stress do your patients generally have?
2. Why did you want to help people?
3. What kinds of stress management do you offer your patients?
4. How long does it take for a patient to ask for help?
5. How long does it take for a patient to manage stress?
6. What do you think can stop stress from becoming a major problem?
7. Is stress one of your main symptom for your patients?
8. Does the stress that teens deal with differ in stress in adults?
9. What kinds of stress do you deal with and do you get help with dealing with it?
10. What are the stages of stress?
11. What types of stress can lead up to abuse?
12. In your opinion, are your patients dealing with stress that can’t be helped?
13. Stress causes bad eating habits, what treatments can help patients with this?
14. Eating habits are shaped by the types of stress humans are dealt with, if eating healthy and exercising are good for your body is it good for your stress?
15. Can stress impact your relationships and/or body?
16. What can be a long term effect of stress?
17. How much stress is too much?
18. Can patients with an illness such as cancer or depression handle stress?
19. If stress is leading to suicide, what are the signs?
20. What can stress lead to?
answer the questions for an infromational brochure i am working on
DELFINA










7 Responses to “Does anyone have a career in stress?”
By Dick Peters on May 22, 2009 | Reply
Forget about stress. Focus on fun!
By KELLEY on May 23, 2009 | Reply
I have a degree in stress!!!
By Cameron on May 27, 2009 | Reply
If you have a hard job.
By Lauren S on May 29, 2009 | Reply
I think stress is the most deadliest feeling out there…i **** it and hope to over come it and be happy
By RAE♥N.Y. on May 31, 2009 | Reply
1)depression
2) because I love people
By Kane M on Jun 1, 2009 | Reply
I own/operate a floatation center in SF.
I am not a physician so I have clients.
Stress is the leading cause of all disease.
It affects the body/mind completely.
I want to help others because I have experience states that were free of stress and these times are amazing.
Stress has numerous sources. In fact, I look as stress very generically. To me stress is caused by bringing in more information than your system can process. This could be food, emotions, people, situations, work, etc.
Stress leads to the fight/flight response in which your body secrets hormones that are designed to protect. This causes the digestion to become weakened which then affects every part of the body.
Most stress can simply be relieved by spending time alone and in silence each day. Focusing on breath is another effective way to relieve stress immediately. Floatation is the best stress reliever that I have ever experienced. I am a walking testimony.
By Jack on Jun 2, 2009 | Reply
1. most patients have an anxiety disorder
2. i choose to help others where i once needed help
3. counselling
4. as long as they wait
5. depends of their determination to feel better
6. coping with the stress and having good support
7. definitely8. the stress is always the same, the causes are what vary
9. mostly just time management stress
10. stress has no observable stages, just levels, each making the person feel more desperate
11. any stress can lead to an abuse, it depends on the person
12. there is no such thing as stress that can’t be helped
13. eating is a was of feeling better, just by controlling the urges can the person stop the impulse eating
14. staying healty will make stress less severe, it also helps you in releasing endorphines which make you happy
15. stress you deal with has an impact on everyone and everything around you if not kept in check
16. obesity, ulcers, mental disorders
17. depression from stress
18. cancer patients deal with depression also, and depression is treatable, but makes a stressed person alot more volatile
19. depression, over eating, under eating, weird behavior, and suicidal thoughs
20. badily damage, depression, suicide, mental disorders