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When it comes to clients scheduling a massage therapy appointment, stress is a main motivator. A report released Nov. 9 shows that Americans are stressed to the point that psychologists involved in creating the report fear stress may become a public health crisis.
Findings from the American Psychological Associations (APA) 2010 Stress in America survey signal an alarm about the long-term impact chronic stress could have on physical and emotional health, and the health of families as well, psychologists said in an APA press release.
"America is at a critical crossroads when it comes to stress and our health," said psychologist Norman B. Anderson, Ph.D., APAs chief executive officer and executive vice president. "Stress is hurting our physical and emotional health and contributing to some of the leading causes of death in this country."
The survey was conducted online by Harris Interactive in August. It shows that Americans appear to be caught in a cycle where they manage stress in unhealthy ways and lack the willpower and time to make healthy lifestyle or behavioral changes, the press release noted. Children as young as 8 years old are reporting physical and emotional health consequences often associated with stress.
"[O]ur health care system is not adequately addressing this issue or providing the behavioral health treatments that can help Americans," said Anderson. "All of us, including the medical community, need to take stress seriously since stress could easily become our next public health crisis."
Among the results:
One-third (32 percent) of parents report that their stress levels are extreme. (A level of 8 to 10 on a 10-point scale.)
Parents overall say they are living with stress levels that exceed their definition of healthy. (Parents report an average stress level of 6.1 on a 10-point scale while the average healthy level of stress reported by parents is a 3.9.)
While many people feel its important to manage their stress (69 percent say managing stress is extremely or very important), few are being successful in their efforts (only 32 percent believe they are doing an excellent or very good job of managing their stress).
Children and adults alike who are obese or overweight are more likely to report that they feel stress, and overweight or obese
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