4.6 • 8.7K Ratings
🗓️ 26 June 2020
⏱️ 13 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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It can often feel like stress is all around us. Stress can come in many different forms. Socioeconomic stress is a real burden for many people, as is the stress of taking care of several generations within a family, or meeting the demands of our jobs. Stress can also come in the form of bad food and poor or inadequate sleep. In all its many forms stress leads to inflammation. And inflammation actually kills the brain cells that help us make good decisions, and it makes those in the fight or flight part of the brain grow. This leads to anger and opposition and supports negative behavior and decision making.
Dr. Hyman explores how stress can lead us to make unhealthy choices in his recent conversations with Drs. Rangan Chatterjee, Austin Perlmutter, and David Perlmutter. They also share information about what we can do to stop the negative effects of stress in our lives.
Dr. Rangan Chatterjee is regarded as one of the most influential doctors in the UK and wants to change how medicine will be practiced for years to come. He hosts the biggest health podcast in Europe, Feel Better, Live More, which Apple has announced as one of the most downloaded new podcasts of the past year. His first book, How to Make Disease Disappear, is an international bestseller all over the world and has sold over 250,000 copies worldwide in just 18 months. His most recent book, the #1 bestseller, The Stress Solution, tackles what the WHO calls the health epidemic of our time—stress.
Dr. David Perlmutter is a Board-Certified Neurologist and four-time New York Times bestselling author. He serves on the Board of Directors and is a Fellow of the American College of Nutrition. He serves as a member of the Editorial Board for the Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease and has published extensively in peer-reviewed scientific journals including Archives of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and The Journal of Applied Nutrition. His books have been published in 34 languages and include the #1 New York Times bestseller Grain Brain, The Surprising Truth About Wheat, Carbs and Sugar, with over 1 million copies in print. Dr. Perlmutter’s new book Brain Wash, co-written with his son Austin Perlmutter, MD, was just released on January 14, 2020.
Dr. Austin Perlmutter is a board-certified internal medicine physician. He received his medical degree from the University of Miami and completed his internal medicine residency at Oregon Health and Science University in Portland Oregon. His academic focus is on understanding the decision-making process, how it is influenced by internal and external factors, and how it changes our health and illness outcomes. He is also interested in methods of improving burnout and poor mental health in the medical field. He writes for Psychology Today on his blog, The Modern Brain.
Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length interview with Dr. Chatterjee here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/DrRanganChatterjee
Find Dr. Hyman’s full-length interview with Drs. David and Austin Perlmutter here: https://DrMarkHyman.lnk.to/DrsDavidAustinPerlmutter
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0:00.0 | Coming up on this many episode of the doctor's pharmacy, the westernization of the global diet is threatening our |
0:07.0 | behavior, threatening our decision making and |
0:10.0 | fostering and us versus them mentality that is pervasive around the world. Hi, I'm Kay F. |
0:15.3 | Coroet one of the producers of the doctor's pharmacy podcast. It can sometimes feel like stress is everywhere we turn. |
0:21.7 | We know well that stress can wreak havoc on our body. |
0:24.8 | It turns out that it can also influence our behaviors and drive our decision making. |
0:29.8 | Dr. Hyman discussed this in recent interviews with fellow functional medicine practitioner Dr. |
0:34.2 | Rungan Chatterjee and with father and son Dr. David Promoiter and Dr. Austin Promoiter. |
0:39.3 | Here's Dr. Hyman with Dr. Rungan Chatterjee. The truth is that you can't avoid stress. Stress is just a part of life and |
0:46.4 | the question is you know, how do you define stress? How do you relate to stress? |
0:51.0 | How do you interact with it in a way that doesn't control you or affect you in the way that it could? |
0:55.8 | You know, I learned that stress is defined as the perception of a real or imagined threat to your body or your ego. |
1:04.3 | So it could be a lion chasing you. That's a real threat to your body. |
1:07.0 | Or it could be you think your spouse is having an affair, even if they're not. |
1:10.8 | Your body has the same response as if it's being chased by a tiger or a lion. |
1:15.2 | And I think we we don't in our society have |
1:19.9 | mechanisms or systems |
1:22.1 | we're addressing that and not only do we not have systems, but we we are exposed to chronic |
1:28.1 | unremitting stress day in day out minute to minute from the minute we wake up to the minute we go to sleep. |
1:33.8 | And we haven't any structures in our society for really managing that. |
1:37.6 | This is a story that I think many of you listeners will be able to relate to that. |
1:41.7 | In fact, I tell the story in in my book about this chap who I saw. |
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