Sunday, 13 July 2014

© ACADEMIA ARALAR. Estella, Navarra.
HERE is another article which I hope you find interesting.


Teens across the USA are feeling high levels of stress that they say negatively affect every aspect of their lives, a new national survey suggests.
More than a quarter (27%) say they experience "extreme stress" during the school year, vs. 13% in the summer. And 34% expect stress to increase in the coming year.
Stressors range from school to friends, work and family. And teens aren't always using healthy methods to cope, finds the latest Stress in America survey from the Washington, D.C.-based American Psychological Association.
Findings on more than 1,000 teens and almost 2,000 adults suggest that unhealthy behaviors associated with stress may start early and continue through adulthood. With 21% of adults reporting "extreme" stress levels, the survey says that with teens "mirroring adults' high-stress lives" they are "potentially setting themselves up for a future of chronic stress and chronic illness."
The report warns that teens are at risk of a variety of physical and emotional ills and potentially shorter lifespans than their elders if they don't act to "reverse their current trajectory of chronic illness, poor health and shorter lifespans."
"Our study this year gives us a window in looking at how early these patterns might begin," says clinical psychologist Norman Anderson, the association's CEO. "The patterns of stress we see in adults seem to be occurring as early as the adolescent years — stress-related behaviors such as lack of sleep, lack of exercise, poor eating habits in response to stress."
Teens' average stress level was 5.8 out of 10 during the school year and 4.6 in the past month — the survey was taken in August. Adults reported average levels of 5.1 in the past month.
As a result of stress, 40% of teens report feeling irritable or angry; 36% nervous or anxious. A third say stress makes them feel overwhelmed, depressed or sad. Teen girls are more stressed than boys, just as women nationally are more stressed than men.
The report says stress appears to be affecting teens' performance in all aspects of life:
• 59% report that managing their time to balance all activities is a somewhat or very significant stressor;
• 40% say they neglected responsibilities at home because of stress; 21% say they neglected work or school because of stress;
• 32% say they experience headaches because of stress; 26% report changes in sleeping habits;
• 26% report snapping at or being short with classmates or teammates when under stress.
Hannah Sturgill, 18, of Portsmouth, Ohio, was among those surveyed last summer when she was 17 and heading into her senior year in high school.
"The last two years in high school have been the most stressful for me and my friends," she says. "We have to do everything and be perfect for colleges and we have a big workload. Most of the time we talk about how stressed we are."
Sturgill says she skips meals because of stress. Unlike many teens surveyed, she goes to the gym to work out every day. Only about 37% of teens surveyed exercise or walk to manage stress; 28% play sports. Many more choose what experts say are less healthy activities, including playing video games (46%) and spending time online (43%).
This is the first time the group has focused on teen stress. Other research has studied teen depression and other mental health concerns, but officials say this may be the most comprehensive national look at stress in teens to date. Despite anecdotal reports of high stress, researchers say stress itself in adolescents hasn't been studied broadly; global comparisons have focused on adult stress rather than teens.
Despite teens' own perceptions, some experts question whether stress is merely a convenient excuse for teen behaviors.
"It's hard to know" if all the negative effects teens report are "really based on stress," says clinical psychologist Jonathan Abramowitz, of Chapel Hill, N.C. "It's hard enough for anyone to really explain why they do certain things, like procrastinating. Give a kid any excuse — it may or may not have anything to do with stress."
Michael Bradley, a psychologist in Feasterville, Pa., who specializes in teens, agrees.
"I'm not sure it would be the clinical definition of stress. I think they get stressed because somebody puts a demand on them and they don't want to do it," he says. "However, on their behalf, I will fall back on the fact that hard numbers tell us kids are more anxious and depressed than they've ever been."
A literature review of mental health among U.S. adolescents by the non-profit Child Trends released last year, for example, found that one in four high school students have shown mild symptoms of depression. The report noted symptoms include persistent irritability, anger, withdrawn behavior and deviations from normal appetite or sleep patterns. The report also said 29% of high school students in grades 9-12 reported feeling sad or hopeless almost every day for two weeks or longer during the past year.
In addition, a study about depression published in 2012 in the journal Clinical Psychological Science, found that rates of suicide attempts were significantly higher in adolescents ages 13-17 than in emerging adults (ages 18-23) or adults (24-30).
Kristen Race, of Steamboat Springs, Colo., author of the book Mindful Parenting, out in January, says teens are generally honest about responding to confidential surveys.
"They're more honest in that situation than telling their parents how stressed they are," she says. "When teens report their own level of stress, it is typically much higher than parents would report of their teen's level of stress."
Anderson says the survey did find enough subtlety to satisfy skeptics.
"While one might argue it's very easy to say everything is affected by stress, what's interesting is they're not doing that," he says. "They're differentiating between the things they believe are negatively impacted by stress vs. others. Only 10% believe lower grades are due to stress. They seem to be very nuanced in their attributions of what stress does."
Race says the fact that stress levels dip in the summer suggests how important summer is to kids' mental health.
"If you look at teen suicide statistics, stress is one of the things that leads to suicide attempts," she says. "It's incredibly important to have the downtime, and it makes sense to have a dramatic shift in the summer. They sleep more in the summer, and that's going to enormously increase their ability to think positively. "
Bradley says teens need help from parents — to a point.
"Some parents set out on a mission to get rid of stress in their kids, but the fact is, some degree of stress is very therapeutic and an appropriate amount of stress is what helps us become strong. The hard part is what's appropriate," Bradley says. "We do know the more we try to mitigate all stress in our children's life the less resilient that child becomes and they feel hopeless about their own future."
Among survey findings on U.S. adults:
• 37% report exercising less than once a week or not at all;
• 27% say they eat to manage stress;
• 43% exercise or walk and 9% play sports to manage stress;
• 62% manage stress with screen time: 42% go online; 42% watch two or more hours of TV or movies a day; 21% play video games.

6 comments:

  1. I already knew how bad stress can affect us, but I did not have an idea of the studies made. Sleeping and eating are both fundamental acctions in our lives, and knowing that stress afeccts on them we should take it more seriously. Likewise, sport helps our body and our mental health.

    In my opinión, teenangers suffer a lot of stress nowadays and something must be done. Anyway, if teens are the ones with hte problema, they are the only ones who can change it, and so they must be teach to do so.

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  2. Stress is a common feeling nowadays, our life is becoming more and more busy and it is difficult to control the stress. When we join the fact that work must be done perfectly and by the time it is said stress apears. I have been surprised when I have read the different methods that people use to combat the stress, I did not know that some people eat for it.

    Moreover, personally I do not feel stressed during the summer but when the academic year starts stress apears in my life. We have too many things to do and if we are sleep deprived we don't have enough energy to face a day without arguments.

    To sum up, as Estibaliz has said, we should be teached to manage this problem.

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  3. Nowadays stress is common in students lifes because teachers want us to do lots of things or because they are always talking about how important studies are for our life, especially if you are in high school.

    As in the study I think that girls live more stressed than boys and maybe is because they do not care about their future or because we think more than we should. I also think that is because we want to do things as much perfect as we can and that causes us stress.

    Personally I have never got stressed, nervous yes but that is not stress, but this last year has been terrible refering to stress levels. For me the best way to relax is doing exercise.

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  4. Reading this type of news, we all have to realise how badly the stress can affect us. When we are little we don't live stressed but when the time goes on and people grow up there is a big change. Personally, I get stressed in such an easily way and most of the times I blame the school for it. We have to do our homework, study and go to out of school activities. Because of that, sometimes we don't have enough time to sleep and sleep deprive won't help in overtaking this problem.

    Summer is a big help to dip the stress, until the school year comes again.It is also a good a idea to practice sports or other activities to forgot about our daily life problems, it can be really helpful.

    Some people have to cope with a lot of stress and specialists have to teach them, specially to teens, to live in a more relaxed way.

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  5. It is true that stress is something normal nowadays, so many people suffer it because of their jobs or, in teenagers situation, because of the requirements of the school. Also, I think that some stress appears because we have so many things that we don´t know what to use and we enter a state of stress.

    There are plenty of ways to eliminate stress, like the girls have said, sport is one of them, and in my opinion is really usefull. From my point of view, the best one is learning how to organize our time, it´s something that they should teach us since we are little.

    Actually, I have never suffered stress, but so I have been told, this year I will suffer it.

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  6. Before reading this article I didn't know how high the stress rates were because personally I don't suffer it but it is such a serious thing. Like the article says, high stress levels can lead to depresion and consecuently in some cases to suicide. In my opinion, we don't give stress the importance it deserves because we see it like something normal but we shouldn't.

    For me the main cause of this phenomenon is bad organization. During the summer we (teenagers) propose ourselves to be organized during the school year and to do some work everyday but in the end our purpose fails and we end up having 100 things to do in a single day.

    Like the other girls have said, someone should tell us how to manage with this.

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