Depression, Mood And Anxiety Disorders

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

If you have been experiencing feelings of depression or anxiety or have had symptoms of other mood disturbances, please know that you’re not alone. Up to 70% of the women who come to the Women to Women clinic are already taking prescription medications for symptoms like yours. Some women may experience relief from their symptoms initially, but the side effects of antidepressant medications are not all beneficial. There is hope though – a natural approach can work to treat the underlying cause of your symptoms (for more information, read our article, “Diagnosing The Symptoms Of Depression“.

Why do women so commonly suffer from problems with their moods? What makes our approach different and effective? Our approach is based on the belief that our bodies interact with our biological makeup in unique ways, based on our emotional experiences. Current research backs this up.

As an example, many women I see grew up in homes where physical as well as emotional pain and anxiety pain prevailed, so they duplicate these circumstances in their adult lives; this is what feels “normal” to them. Many women with mood disorders had dysfunctional families of origin, setting the stage for what they consider to be normal.

Other women may have been subject to various factors during their lives that set off mood dysregulation in many different forms. Thinking about a chemical imbalance, poor diet alone can be the final straw for a woman who is already stressed-out. Our daily lives are filled with potential stressors in the form of toxins, pollutants and endocrine disruptors that have changed our overall neurochemistry.

Today’s culture also adds insult to injury. In order to be winners, we’re told to censor any negative psychosocial issues; those who don’t are considered to be weak and undeserving. We’re reminded “Don’t worry, be happy.” In other words, don’t be a nut job.

Looking at all these factors helps to explain the prevalence of depression and anxiety in our country. It’s easy to understand why women want to “fix” their mood troubles quickly and quietly by taking a pill. Conventional methods tell us we can either medicate our mood or “learn to live with it.”

I know we’re smarter than that. We know by intuition that life isn’t that easy. We try so hard to do everything “right” but sometimes life just isn’t pretty and picture perfect. In all of our striving for success externally, we avoid the internal work that allows us to reach developmental goals with our body, minds and spirits intact.

Making a journey through our life’s pleasure and burdens requires self-care and inner discoveries. There are alternative choices, apart from drugs to help along the way; options that are safe and natural. Many have been shown by research to be equally, if not more effective than prescription medications.

Depression, anxiety and other mood disorders are not all in your head. These issues develop as a result of neurochemical imbalances. These imbalances disrupt the pathways that regulate your mood. What causes the imbalance is usually a combination of many factors: life stress, environmental issues, toxicity, emotional history, biochemistry and genetics. When a woman comes to me with physical and emotional symptoms, we look together at her whole story to see what could be causing her problems.

There is hope. Each of these stressors can be addressed. You can take one small step at a time to personally make changes. Begin to see yourself as a whole person, who has value and great worth as a woman.

By using an individual plan that measures dietary approaches, nutritional supplements, exercise, body work, and sometimes talk therapy or bioidentical therapy, most women can begin to rewrite their emotional stories. You can have a new story too, with chapters that include a dynamic and emotionally fulfilling life.

The Healthy Mediterranean Diet: Omega-3s and Phytonutrients

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

One of the most natural ways for women to achieve health and wellness is through a nutritious diet that includes protein, carbohydrates and healthy fats. When we think about fat, we want our diets to resemble the centuries old Mediterranean style of eating, not the recent fast-food or crash diet styles of eating that are popular today.

If you have concerns about fat in your diet leading to weight gain, or about the potential side effects of omega-3 supplements, please know that healthy fats are actually vital to weight loss. They help to decrease inflammation, controlling blood glucose levels and facilitate the functioning of blood vessels, so nutritional uptake is maximized. This works to reduce our cravings and it resets our metabolism. These are important factors in maintaining weight in a healthy range. For more information, read our article, “Balancing Your Omega-3 Fatty Acids – Essential For Health and Long Life.”

In past generations, people consumed a diet that was healthy, mostly because there was no other choice. Chemically preserved and processed foods which are readily available today didn’t exist. Our ancestor’s omega-6 to omega-3 ratios were more balanced and were healthier. People today are being encouraged by their medical practitioners to eat in this healthier way. At Women to Women, we’ve been enjoying it for years.

There has been a lot of research completed and it has been found that eating Mediterranean-style is one of the most effective ways to work natural omega-3 fatty acids, monounsaturated fats (MUFAs) and phytonutrients into your diet.

The Mediterranean diet is really about a way of life. Its emphasis is on fresh, whole foods instead of processed, prepackaged or preserved foods. Meals are to be enjoyed at your leisure, and with friends and family whenever possible. It may seem like you’ve heard this before, but if not, and this is all new information, the change can be very simple and the benefits are remarkable. Try to remember the benefits aren’t the result of one food in particular, but from the pattern of eating as a whole. The general guidelines to a Mediterranean-style of eating are:

  • Try to get plenty of brightly colored fresh fruits and vegetables every day
  • Any kind of peas or beans are recommended (Legumes)
  • Whole grains are excellent
  • Walnuts, other tree nuts and flax seed (1-1.5 ounce or ¼ to 1/3 cup daily)
  • Extra virgin olive oil (keep this in the refrigerator if you can)
  • Grass fed and lean meats, free-range poultry – this has little to zero saturated fats
  • Red wine in moderate amounts if desired – one drink per day for women
  • Avoid all trans-fats – includes anything that is “partially hydrogenated” like margarine

The guidelines of the Mediterranean diet are so relaxed. The focus is not so much on how the food is prepared, but on how bright and how fresh it is. It’s easy to enjoy because it’s so simple and delicious. If you only try one of the ideas listed above at a time, you will see health benefits over time. It’s never too late to reap the rewards of making even the smallest of changes.

Nutritional and Lifestyle Guidelines

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

SS Black Woman Eating SmilingEating is a primitive urge, like sleeping or going to the bathroom. When food sources are abundant, we are hard-wired to eat as much as our body needs to function, survive, and reproduce, but also — more critically — to store against the possibility of famine. Eating is also a source of comfort and pleasure. This too is hard-wired. When we sit and eat, our bodies get the message that — for the moment — it is okay to relax. We are nurturing ourselves. No hard labor or strenuous physical activity can occur at that moment. This is powerful motivation.

What has caught us unaware is the degradation and manipulation of our food supply combined with a major decrease in our physical activity. Over-processed food, refined sugar products, preservatives, trans fats, artificial sweeteners, and food substitutes now populate the bulk of our grocery aisles. Our food is transported thousands of miles and must keep for weeks, losing much of its nutritional value in transit. Today, we drive instead of walk, use machines more often than our muscles, and eat out or are on the run more frequently. In addition, we have multi-million dollar industries bent on coercing us to buy and eat a seemingly endless supply of unhealthy food.

Instead of berating ourselves for “cheating” when we eat a food that is not in our best interests, we need to think about the totality of our lifestyle choices with our individual histories and needs (both physical and emotional) in mind.

Let’s face it – Food is good! Eating is fun! It’s no wonder we find it agonizing to deprive ourselves of this most basic and nurturing act. Instead of all the negativity, I’d like to encourage women to rediscover the positive nature of sharing food around the table. It all begins with that magic word -balance.

The best way to jumpstart your metabolic function is to eat well (which includes taking a daily multivitamin), and to eat regularly and often – we just ask that you watch your portion size. And you have a great portion control tool right at hand — your own hand!

  • Your thumb = 1 oz
  • Your palm = 3–4 oz
  • Your closed fist = 1 cup
  • Your thumb tip = 1 tsp
  • A handful = 1–2 oz of snack food, like nuts

Healthy food choices!Just as your body needs to be in balance to function well, your meals need balance to provide adequate nutrition. It may be helpful to revise your mental picture of a healthy meal from a pyramid to a square. The square has four compartments: protein, healthy fat, fruits/vegetables, and grains/legumes. Eating three “squares” a day is a good way to think about it, we also want women to have two healthy snacks a day. In fact, the USDA food guide pyramid will soon be adjusted to reflect new Daily Reference Intake (DRI) guidelines based on similar research.

It is a suggestion based on years of research into healthful eating for hormonal balance. We have found that you can restrict sugar and carbohydrates without depriving your body of necessary nutrients. The basic guidelines are as follows:

  • Eat 3 meals a day and 2 or more snacks.
  • Eating every 2 hours is a good idea if you are under stress.
  • Eat protein at every meal.
  • Eat a vegetable or fruit at every meal. In fact, eat as much as you want when it comes to organic greens and vegetables, as long as they aren’t coated with unhealthy fats.
  • Include healthy fats in your diet, particularly foods rich in omega-3s and omega-6s.
  • Avoid trans fats.

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Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) — Or Intestinal Parasites?

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

Irritable Bowel Syndrome IBS Digestive Woman StomachWhen I started my practice in the early 1980s, I was amazed at the number of women who suffered from constipation, diarrhea, increased gas, bloating after eating, fatigue and the many other symptoms of gastrointestinal distress.

It wasn’t long before we realized this was a women’s health issue. Research indicates that gastrointestinal distress is twice as common in women as in men, that women have a greater incidence of complicating factors (like fibromyalgia, migraine, and heartburn) and that for some women, symptoms follow their menstrual cycle.

In the past I often referred patients to gastroenterologists. Frequently they came back to me with the diagnosis of Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), and the recommendation that they should make dietary changes, increase fiber in their diet and use Metamucil. Too often these changes brought them no relief. I was aware at that time that stress could play a part in their discomfort, and made suggestions accordingly. But this also did not seem to be very effective. This kind of distress is considered a non-serious “functional condition” (meaning not a disease) in the professional medical community. But as a veteran of visits to third-world countries, I knew from personal experience how uncomfortable and frustrating these symptoms can be.

Irritable Bowel Syndrome IBS Digestive Food Question MarkIt is now my belief that IBS is just the beginning of the story, not the conclusion. I think IBS is being used by doctors as a catch-all diagnosis for a complicated host of symptoms that need to be explored in depth before the root cause (such as yeast, parasites or food sensitivities) can be identified and treated. Because of my own experience with GI distress, I now test for parasites in every woman who comes into the clinic with a diagnosis of IBS or similar symptoms. You may be surprised to learn that 40% of these women prove to have parasites — even though many have never left the United States.

Let’s talk about how these symptoms arise and what you can do about them.

An unwelcome souvenir

In the mid 1980’s I went to Mexico and got what is known as “Montezuma’s Revenge.” I returned to the U.S. and realized I had all the symptoms that my patients had been complaining about. So I did a stool test which was sent to the hospital. I was surprised when the test indicated nothing abnormal.

Being the person that I am, I did not stop there, but began to explore within the alternative medical community what options were available. I found a chiropractor who recommended a lab in Arizona. Sure enough, this stool test came back indicating parasites. She then effectively treated me and also recommended staying away from particular foods to which I had become sensitive. My symptoms disappeared. So began my real awakening to the alternatives for women who suffer from gastrointestinal symptoms that cannot be explained as irritable bowel syndrome or simply secondary to anxiety.

Role of the gastrointestinal tract

The major function of the gastrointestinal system is to break down food and establish a means by which the nutrients can be absorbed in the body. Nutrients that are liberated by this process allow the body to grow, heal and function on a day-to-day basis. In the mouth, the teeth break up the food and mix this with saliva. Salivary enzymes initiate the breakdown of food into usable forms, particularly with fat and starch digestion.

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Health and Vitamins – Who Should Take Dietary Supplements And Why?

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

Virtually everyone has a family history that includes a chronic illness such as heart disease, diabetes or cancer. You may be concerned that you carry a genetic predisposition to one or more of these diseases. But recent science has shown there’s much you can do to prevent disease, starting with nutrition. The good news is that with proper nutrition, including dietary supplements, you can rewrite your life story with a happier ending.

SS Supplements Bottle DaisiesSo why are so many people still unaware of the importance of taking vitamins?  Which vitamins do you need and what are the best multivitamins to take?  Why are drug companies and doctors often opposed to nutritional supplements?  Why is there continued debate over vitamin safety and dosages?

We’ve used nutritional supplements and dietary changes as medical therapies for over 20 years. To this day, we recommend that every woman take a pharmaceutical-grade multivitamin. Yet we agree there are reasons to be concerned about how multivitamins are marketed and used. So let’s talk about what we advocate when it comes to dietary supplements and how we answer women’s questions about the vitamin controversy.

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The link between nutrition and chronic diseases

The increase in chronic illnesses is one of the major health stories of our lifetime. Today seven out of ten Americans will die from the complications of a chronic disease, including heart disease, cancer, obesity, diabetes, depression, metabolic and digestive disorders (including heartburn and acid reflux), rheumatoid arthritis, fibroids, and osteoporosis, just to name a few. Acute diseases, by contrast, are characterized by rapid onset, are usually treated with antibiotics or surgery and are time-limited.

Why the dramatic increase in chronic diseases?  Clearly we are living longer and under greater stress, both of which contribute to degenerative conditions. But only recently has the role of nutrition begun to be given its due.

Conventional practitioners treat chronic diseases with an ever-growing array of expensive pharmaceuticals that may temporarily relieve the painful or uncomfortable symptoms, but do nothing to resolve the underlying cause — and may actually cause other serious problems. SS Woman's Hand With PillsThat’s because conventional medicine is focused on disease screening and drug treatment — ignoring the more powerful approach of disease prevention, especially through nutrition.

What about the role of genetic factors in causing disease?  In our view, genetics rarely determine definitively that someone will develop a disease. Instead, you may inherit a genetic predisposition — a kind of vulnerability — that when combined with other factors results in disease. Nutrition is arguably the most important of those factors.

Many of our patients at our medical practice are surprised to learn that their chronic condition or disease can so often be traced to a nutritional deficiency. But the linkage is clear enough. Nutrition affects our immune system, organ function, hormonal balance and cellular metabolism. The nutritional deficiency comes first, followed some years later by symptoms, which lead in time to disease. To make things worse, the whole downward spiral is accompanied by accelerated aging.

Multivitamins and hormonal balance

Our bodies require micronutrients for the non-stop process of synthesizing hormones from simpler molecules. It is simply impossible to achieve and maintain hormonal balance without such support. We have found it helpful to describe hormonal balance to our patients as a kind of symphony in their bodies in which the instruments of the orchestra play together to create health. When some of the players aren’t there, it doesn’t sound right — and you don’t feel good.

Remember that our hormones fluctuate with our circumstances. It is important to understand that cortisol and adrenaline levels rise and fall as we work out stressful situations. Stable insulin levels provide the framework that allows all of our major female hormones to communicate with one another. If nutrients are low or missing, the balance of this communication is undermined. To remain flexible and strong, especially when approaching menopause, we all need to give our hormones the wide array of nutrients they need.

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For Those Women That Have Had A Hysterectomy

by Marcelle Pick, OB-GYN, NP

Generally, many women who undergo a hysterectomy (but retain their ovaries) will experience changes in their hormones, even though they still have ovarian function. Some won’t note any differences following their hysterectomy, whereas others will immediately notice significant symptomatology of menopause, even though their ovaries are intact.

We have several recommendations for women who are having a hysterectomy.  First, they may want to consider the use of natural progesterone prior to the hysterectomy. They may then want to have their hormones evaluated by a local practitioner and introduce natural progesterone, 21 days on and one week off, or two weeks on and one week off.

In addition, we recommend they begin using soy isoflavones, 80 mg a day, to prevent the symptoms of hot flashes. We also recommend the use of black cohosh, one tablet twice a day, in-between meals, a quality multivitamin that contains calcium and magnesium, and omega-3 essential fatty acids. This will prove to be extremely beneficial, along with dietary changes consistent with decreasing carbohydrate intake, to alleviate many of the symptoms that some women experience after having a hysterectomy.

Natural Sleep Aids – The Impossible Dream

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

Topics covered in this article:

  • Herbal sleep remedies
  • Sleep aids from natural biochemical
  • Nutritional tips to improve sleep

It’s no secret that many women today will say they need more sleep. Even when we do finally get to go to bed, the quality of our sleep is not what it should be. All day we race from one task to the next, and when we lie down to rest, our minds continue to spin. We can be so bogged with thoughts of what we’ve done and what’s left to do to that sleep escapes us.

We all know that good, sound sleep is vital to our well-being. If you have trouble sleeping, there could be many causes, but many times I see a big connection between insomnia and stress. Our sleep cycles (circadian rhythms) are directly connected to our stress hormones. Many of the common sleep aids, such as Tylenol PM, Lunesta or Ambien don’t really address the source of sleeplessness, and they often have a “hang-over” effect which leaves users feeling groggy and foggy in the morning.

Thankfully, to inspire hope, nature has given us plenty of ways to promote restful sleep. You can get your sleep cycle back in balance by addressing the cause of the problem. And in the meantime, there are some safe and natural ways to help you get some much-needed rest in the meantime. Let’s look at this a little closer.

Herbal sleep aids

For hundreds of years, women have been using these herbs to promote relaxation and rest. I’ve promoted herbs at in my practice for decades and my patients have seen wonderful results.

  • Passionflower (passiflora incarnate): Scientists believe this soothes the nervous system through increasing the availability of GABA, a relaxing chemical. It’s calming effects may also be determined by the same receptors in the brain which are sensitive to prescription-strength sedatives, but without the troubling side effects. Passionflower can be found in powders, tinctures, teas and infusions.
  • Chamomile – Roman or English: (matricaria recutita, chamaemelum nobile): This herb’s relaxing and calming effects are most commonly attributed to the flavonoid apigenin. As with passionflower, apigenin appears to increase the availability of GABA in the brain. It is used commonly to treat sleeplessness, anxiety and nervousness.
  • Kava kava (piper methysticum): The phytochemicals found in the root of the kava plant are thought to work through increased binding to GABA, dopamine and opiate receptors in the brain, and therefore help to relieve anxiety, insomnia and restlessness. The food and drug administration had concerns about kava and liver damage in 2002, but these concerns may have been related to overuse of the product or inferior product quality.
  • Valerian (valeriana officinalis): This herb was used in ancient Greece and in Rome as a mild sedative and relaxant. In recent studies it has been proven effective as a sleep aid and anti-anxiety agent in both animal studies and in clinical trials. It works to relieve the brain’s nervous tension by binding to GABA receptors.

Good sleep habits

  • Nutrition/Hydration: Consider what and when you’re eating and drinking. Some things to think about are: sugar, caffeine, alcohol. Keep track and see if you discover a pattern between your intake of these stimulants and your sleep.
  • Establish a routine: Set a consistent bedtime if you can. Try to unplug and wind down one hour before bed. If you exercise, consider exercising in the morning.
  • Assess your environment: Try to make sure your room is dark, fairly quiet and your bed is comfortable for you. Don’t let light, clocks, phones or other electronics disturb your rest.
  • Think about your stress level: Cortisol is the stress hormone which is linked to your circadian rhythms. Supporting good adrenal health and cortisol balance can do a lot to help reset your sleep-wake pattern.

If you want to learn more, see our articles on adrenal imbalance and sleep.

Our body’s own sleep-support

Our own bodies have their own prescription for helping us sleep. When my patients come to me with sleep troubles, depending on their unique situation, I may use supplements to help them gently return to their normal sleep-wake pattern. These combine natural herbs, minerals and molecules to help you sleep naturally, without waking up groggy or feeling hung-over. Talk to your practitioner to see if you would benefit from supplements.

Note: If you are currently taking antidepressants or any medications for sleep or mood disorders, be sure to talk to your healthcare provider before stopping your medication or trying any of the supplements mentioned in this article.

  • Phosphatidylserine (PS) is a molecule which is a basic component of our brain and of our nerve cell membranes. It may help cell-to-cell messaging and communication, and also help interaction between the hypothalamus, pituitary and adrenal glands. This allows for a more effective response to stress and so helps sleep.
  • Melatonin is a hormone that is naturally produced by the gland in your brain known as the pineal gland (whenever it senses the sun going down, or you dim the lights). As melatonin increases, our body becomes less alert and more ready for sleep. Melatonin begins to decrease after puberty, more so even after the age of 40. Supplemental melatonin is very safe and beneficial for people with insomnia. You may want to think about discussing this option with your healthcare provider.
  • 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP) is an amino acid which is produced naturally in our bodies during the production of melatonin and serotonin. The supplemental form is extracted from the seeds of a plant named griffonia. 5-HTP supplements can be very helpful for the release of melatonin without accessing the brain’s light-regulation system, by increasing serotonin. This makes it beneficial as a sleep aid.

Minerals and vitamins to calm and support restful sleep

What about B Vitamins? As a general rule, it’s best to take B vitamins in the morning, or in the first part of your day. They help to decrease anxiety, and because of this, they are often included in natural sleep aids. However, taking B vitamins later in the day can sometimes make people feel more alert. Some women report an energy boost from the B-vitamin so in that case, it’s best to take them in the morning and after the noon meal or an afternoon snack. This may help to avoid the mid-afternoon slump which many of us feel, especially those who have an adrenal imbalance.

Some women are surprised to hear certain natural vitamins and minerals can be beneficial for sleep. Research has shown improvements in anxiety and stress with supplementation with vitamins and minerals. Low magnesium in particular has been found in studies to be associated with anxiety and poor sleep. The ratio of calcium to magnesium has also been correlated with perceived levels of anxiety and stress.

Combining factors

Feeling good involves looking at multiple factors. Sleep is indeed important to health, but it doesn’t tell the whole story. Our sleep patterns are determined by our environment, our diet our stress levels just to name a few. My wish for you is that you will find an approach which works for you to, not only to sleep well, but one that addresses your entire health picture.

Women to Women offers quality nutrient support, herbal stress support and our one-on-one phone support is always there for you. You don’t need to rely on the sleeping pills offered in the drug store. You can make choices that are uniquely right for you and that are natural.

Understanding Test Results – Necessary For Women’s Health Maintenance

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

A big part of staying healthy is being informed. If you know what your body is saying, you can begin to think about what you can do to make positive changes. Lab results help us to track progress and provide us with power and incentive.

I would like to help you look at some vital information so you can get a better understanding of some common medical tests. By having a basic knowledge of these routine tests, you can better advocate for yourself.

  •  Mammogram: assesses breast health
  •  TSH  (thyroid-stimulating hormone): assesses thyroid health
  •  CRP and hs-CRP  (C-reactive protein): checks for inflammatory processes
  •  Iron and ferritin: checks iron levels
  •  DEXA Scan (Dual energy x-ray absorptiometry): bone density test
  •  Vitamin D: Checks Vitamin D levels
  •  LH and FSH (Luteinizing Hormone and follicle stimulating hormone): assesses menopausal symptoms, polycystic ovary disorder, or fertility issues
  •  NTx (N-telopeptide): checks for bone health
  •  Blood glucose: assesses for diabetes
  •  Lipid profile: assesses for cardiovascular risk

Within “normal” limits– we prefer “optimal”

Many conventional practitioners look at lab results based on a “normal” range. When I view my patient’s results, I interpret results using a narrower scale. I usually take the average of the two extremes, plus 25% on either side of that number. If my patient’s result falls outside of this range, we want to initiate some changes. By being proactive, we can often avoid complications before they become permanent or more severe.

Much of today’s medical practice is aimed at fixing problems once they occur rather than at the prevention. Many practitioners use lab testing and imaging studies to diagnosis disease rather than looking at them to paint a picture of a woman’s overall health and well-being before illness sets in. Many women tell me they had no idea they were sick until their disease had progressed to the point of requiring prescription drugs to treat their ailments.

The truth is, most medical offices are so busy most primary care physicians don’t have or take the time to go over each test result or its meaning with their patients. In today’s healthcare system, you are your own best resource and can learn to advocate for yourself.

Charting your own course to wellness

Even the very best doctor can’t know what it’s like to live in your body. We all have our own personal stories and are living our own lives. Our individual histories and our present circumstances influence our health in multiple ways, making us all unique. Blood levels which are normal for you, might not suit another woman at all, just like a weight which is healthy for me, might cause problems for someone else.

All practitioners agree some lab test results require immediate attention, no matter who the patient may be. For most patients though, we’re reviewing small changes. When I review any of the tests I’ve listed above, I compare them to past results and look at the patient as a whole. If I see a pattern, we can intervene quickly, before disease sets in or worsens.

Medical testing and modern technology, coupled with the wisdom of your own body, allow us to prevent disease and assure you of a long and healthy future. If we use our knowledge, not to react, but to proactively act by taking the steps necessary to prevent illness, we will achieve wonderful outcomes.

How Emotional Experience Determines Your Health

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

This is probably the most important single article on our website. Please make the time to read it.

The conventional theory of medicine says that your health is a matter of your genetics, exposure to infection and lifestyle. But with rare exceptions, your emotional experience is a greater factor than any of those. That’s not just our assertion — there’s now solid science behind the correlation of emotional experience and a host of diseases and health conditions, from heart disease and depression to obesity and chronic pain.

At Women to Women, we learned long ago that no one can really be well without dealing with their emotional health. This may seem like a radical idea, but for so many women with intractable health problems, there won’t be any progress on a physical level — no matter what therapy is used — until there is progress at the emotional level. As Alice Miller expresses it in the title of her book, The Body Never Forgets — even if the emotional problem developed 50 years ago.

The good news is that you can do so much to heal your emotional self. And if you are at mid-life, you should know that in menopause your body is asking you to deal with unresolved emotional issues. This is the time to work on your emotional and physical health — together. So let’s explore the role of your emotional experience and how to use it to reclaim your self.

Proof of the link between emotions and health

While there are hundreds of studies that explore the emotional roots of disease, the most insightful place to start may be the breakthrough ACE Study.

In the 1990’s over 17,000 patients of a large health plan were enrolled in a study to assess the link between emotional experience and adult health. (The federal Centers for Disease Control co-designed the study). The results were stunning; as the authors wrote, “…they have given us reason to reconsider the very structure of primary care medical practice in America.”

Participants were asked whether they had experienced any of eight forms of personal abuse or dysfunctional family behavior before the age of 18 (each called an “adverse childhood experience,” or ACE). More than half of the patients had one ACE or more.

Even more surprising was the correlation to health outcomes: those who had experienced an ACE were between 4 and 50 times more likely to have an adverse health condition or disease as an adult. The adverse health outcomes covered a surprisingly wide range, including heart disease, fractures, diabetes, obesity, alcoholism, and more.

The authors concluded that the ACE Study “…documents the conversion of traumatic emotional experiences in childhood into organic disease later in life.”  How does that conversion occur? Before we explore that central question, let’s dwell a moment on just what we mean by adverse emotional experience.

We’re all affected by adverse emotional experience

The ACE Study focused on a relatively narrow set of easily-measured adverse emotional experiences from childhood and found that half of the adults in the study had suffered one. But if we include all dysfunctional family behaviors, plus other emotional traumas (such as death of a loved one) and adult experience, it’s obvious that virtually everyone has suffered an adverse experience by the ACE standard.

So if the ACE Study found that adverse emotional experience was the biggest single factor in predicting adult health, and virtually all of us have had such experiences, what does that say about our approach to preventative health?

The truth is that all emotional experience affects our health, whether positive or negative, and whether it occurs in the past or the present. But negative experiences appear to have more lasting health effects, perhaps because we don’t deal with them.

Let’s back up a step. A feeling is the body and mind’s response to any given situation. Some psychologists and scientists believe we have five basic feelings:  joy, fear, anger, grief and love, with other feelings being variations on these five states. An emotion is what your body does with one of these feeling states.

What we all learn from our families, abusive or dysfunctional or loving, is how to take action with our feelings. If our mothers responded to grief or loss by withdrawing, or dealt with suppressed anger by becoming hypercritical of those they loved, chances are our own responses will be similar. We tend to model our own emotional habits after our parents’ or family’s emotional habits.

What’s the health significance of this emotional modeling? Consider the subject of stress. That’s something we all have, right? The Center for Disease Control estimates that 90% of all visits to the doctor are stress-related, and there are hundreds of medical studies linking stress to a host of diseases. But what exactly is stress?

Most women think of stress as the demands on them that they can’t do anything about, like an unreasonable boss or taking care of an aging parent. But why do some women find those factors stressful and others don’t?

I believe it’s because stress is personal — I find something stressful because of my personal emotional history. So do you. Moreover, each of us tends to recreate stressful emotional situations in our lives — at least until we resolve the old emotional issues that give the stress its power over us.

There’s a commonplace idea that women have greater emotional health than men because women surface and talk about their feelings so much more. That’s true, but it doesn’t mean women’s emotional patterns are healthy. My patients (all women!) have almost all been conditioned to put others ahead of themselves, to “stuff” their emotions (especially anger), to feel unworthy of love, to feel responsible for making others happy, to demand perfection of themselves, and so on. None of those patterns are good for our emotional well-being or our physical health.

Let’s return to how adverse emotional experience translates into health problems. Then we’ll talk about how to turn things around.

Your biography becomes your biology

Our language is filled with expressions of how emotion affects the body: tension and stress gives me a knot in my stomach, overwhelming sadness makes me feel all choked up, a difficult person is a pain in the neck.

More seriously, a recent study showed that sudden emotional shock can cause heart attacks even in healthy people. Called “broken heart syndrome,” these heart attacks were related to the loss of a loved one, fear of an event or activity, or sudden accidents. Notably, most of the sufferers were women.

How does a fleeting feeling have lasting health effects? Research on this is still in its infancy, but there are at least four paths we already know about.

First is the general effect of stress, which triggers the adrenals to produce cortisol and adrenaline. Cortisol is very helpful in small doses (as part of the fight or flight response) but sustained high cortisol levels (the result of unremitting stress) have very destructive effects on the body, including weight gain, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, suppression of immune function and acceleration of aging. For more on cortisol, read our articles on adrenal fatigue.

Second is the effect of unresolved emotional issues on systemic inflammation. Medical research has recently implicated inflammation as a contributing factor in a host of diseases, including cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer’s.  For more on systemic inflammation, read our other informative articles.

Third is the effect of emotions on particular organs. Many alternative practitioners attribute illness in a specific organ to a specific cause. While this is controversial in Western medicine, it has been well documented in medical literature that “Type A” personalities have much higher rates of heart disease, and that women who suffered childhood sexual abuse have higher rates of dysmenorrhea and pelvic pain. The mechanism of action may be peptide chains formed as part of the biochemistry of emotion that bind to receptor sites in specific organs, a concept pioneered by the renowned biochemist Dr. Candace Pert. We believe many more links will be discovered as research in this area continues.

Fourth is the effect of emotions on behavior. The ACE Study revealed a cause and effect link between adverse childhood experience and negative health habits like drinking, smoking, overeating and sexual promiscuity. The authors recognized these negative habits as self-medication for unresolved emotional pain. But over time the suppression of all that pain through these self-destructive habits has terrible consequences.

The myopia of Western medicine regarding emotions

Despite research like the ACE Study and hundreds of others, conventional medicine is blind to the causal role that emotional experience plays in the development of illness and disease. Instead of looking at root causes, it only treats symptoms. No wonder so many patients find themselves going steadily downhill despite the best conventional treatment.

I was once asked in what percentage of my patients were the problems purely physical, that is, lacking any emotional component. After a moment’s thought, I answered “about 1%.” That’s not a statistic, but it conveys the truth – very, very few women’s health problems are just about a physical problem.

Western medicine insists on dealing with each disease or condition as a separate and distinct issue. But that’s just not how the body works. That’s why at Women to Women it takes two hours for your first appointment — we need to know your full history — including a full hour with your practitioner.

Western medicine used to emphasize the full history. But specialization has pushed us to dissociate each aspect of the body from the whole, and managed care has pushed the average appointment time down toward six minutes — and too many people don’t get even that.

Like conventional doctors, many of my patients are so conditioned to think of health as a purely physical issue that they are floored when I suggest their symptoms may have an emotional component. I hope this article helps you connect the dots. Like so many other parts of your life, you are going to have to take responsibility for your emotional health. And if you are at mid-life, this is the perfect time to deal with it.

Menopause and emotional health

Christiane Northrup, MD — one of Women to Women’s co-founders — has written that menopause is largely about “the reclaiming of self.” After a lifetime of taking care of others, “stuffing” our emotions, finding fault with ourselves, and ignoring our feelings of hurt and anger, our biology requires us in menopause to straighten things out, to find our voices, and to reclaim our lives. That’s one reason why so many women are motivated to take control of their health at this time.

Let me give you an example. A patient came in to see me describing constant heavy bleeding (menorrhagia). We tried dietary changes, supplements and other purely physical approaches, with only minimal improvement. I began to probe for the emotional basis of her condition. She shared a description of her marriage to a man who did not support her emotionally and was often verbally abusive. I helped her see the connection between her relationship and her symptoms. One day a few months later, she came into my office and told me she had finally found the courage to leave the relationship. Her heavy bleeding stopped the next day, and has not returned. It was tough to face — but she took control of her life and reclaimed her self.

Menopause provides a natural venue for this work of exploring your emotional environment and your history. It’s like adolescence in reverse: your body asks you to question who you are, what you’re passionate about, and what’s working or not working in your life. All the pieces that haven’t been resolved come up now for healing and transformation. Depression, mood swings, hot flashes, and other symptoms of menopause have a physical origin but also an emotional root — and you need to deal with both at the same time.

The intractable medical condition – no such thing?

The role of the emotions is a big reason for two problems we see every day: the woman who goes to a conventional doctor for her symptoms and is given antidepressants; and the woman with a condition that resists conventional treatment. Many of these women are not going to feel better until they begin to deal with the emotional root of their illness.

In a monograph on the long-term medical consequences of childhood trauma, Stephanie Dallum, FNP, talked about the connection between emotional experience and unexplained physical symptoms. The medical term is somatization — physical symptoms with no medical diagnosis. But the insomnia, headaches, obesity, gastrointestinal distress, palpitations, chronic pain and fatigue caused by adverse emotional experience in her study are very real.

With new patients at our medical practice, we generally begin with the physical issues and treat with dietary changes, nutritional supplements, exercise and other lifestyle changes. We tend to use prescription drugs as a bridge to a more balanced natural state, rarely as an on-going solution. The more severe or intractable the symptoms, and the more receptive the patient, the sooner we introduce the connections to emotional issues. The good news is that those who are willing to tackle both the physical and emotional aspects of their health almost always see the improvement they want.

Mapping your emotional inheritance

At Women to Women we have a shorthand expression for this process of exploring your emotional inheritance and resolving issues. We call it “your work,” as in “she’s just begun to do ‘her work’ but she’s already feeling so much better.”

There is a tool called a genogram that therapists use that may be helpful to you as well. A genogram is a specialized family tree that lets you explore the patterns and relationships running through your family history. We’ve found free genogram software on the internet if you’d like to try it.

As you use the genogram to map out your emotional inheritance, ask yourself questions to find the parallels between you and your family members. For example, if certain interactions with your husband affect you badly, ask yourself who he is being like in your family — and who are you being like?  What emotional patterns can you see from generation to generation?  What family conflicts or secrets have never been resolved — and why not?  What emotions have been “stuck” — like grief or anger or pain — and how might they be dealt with now?

How do you heal past emotional experience?

There’s plenty of evidence, both from our clinical experience and from medical research, that emotional healing creates positive physical changes in the body. So how to accomplish that?

In a perfect world we would all be able to afford a few years of therapy — and with the right therapist! We do ask women to view that cost as an investment in their health. We especially recommend therapies based on family of origin. But not all of us can make that investment.

There are group therapy options that are affordable and can be helpful. You may be able to make progress with a like-minded friend or family member. The Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT) has been helpful for many women; there is free online information about EFT as well as reasonably-priced EFT workshops.

Yoga, meditation, exercise and other stress-relieving techniques are helpful as part of your overall health plan, but unfortunately they are not a substitute for “your work.” You may also benefit greatly from books. We recommend No One Is To Blame by Robert Hoffman, creator of the Hoffman Process that underlies the therapeutic method now known as the Quadrinity Process. We also suggest using The Whole Person Fertility Process by Niravi Payne as a workbook for exploring your emotional inheritance.

Unfortunately reading is not a very emotional experience, and thinking about your emotional issues isn’t going to resolve them. That’s why therapy — one on one, in a group, or with a self-help method like EFT — is so important. We suggest you think of this as an on-going process, just like the other parts of your health strategy.

Deal with the past and move on

It may take courage and faith to examine your own life, to face the past with kindness and gentleness for the person you have been and the people who have caused you pain, and to support the person you feel yourself becoming. Healing your past emotional experience helps create a joyful, healthy present moment and opens the doors to the life you want for yourself.

We love the study of centenarians (those who live to be 100) done at Harvard Medical School a few years ago. The oldsters were found to be surprisingly healthy and active. Dr. Margery Silver, one of the authors, said in an interview, “…there is a particular characteristic that is typical of centenarians. And that is that they are able to manage stress very well. And this doesn’t mean that they’ve had stress-free lives…some of them have had really very difficult, and even traumatic lives. There are holocaust survivors, there are women who were widowed at an early age and scrubbed floors to raise their children, and yet they seem to have the ability to roll with the punches…they seem to accept their losses, grieve them and then move on.”

This is a vision of emotional health we wish for all of us — to face our emotional pain with honesty and openness, and get on with our lives.

Preventing Heart Disease – The Natural Approach

by Marcelle Pick, OB/GYN NP

Every day, minute by minute, our hearts beat – pumping life sustaining blood through our bodies – keeping our vital organs healthy and functioning – and many of us never even think about the power of this tremendous organ. Nurturing your heart, even in the smallest of ways, is vital to your health. Nurturing can take many forms – eating a heart healthy diet, managing stress, maintaining an exercise routine and keeping joy in your life are all important in keeping your heart healthy!

Some women have genetic factors or a family history which brings more attention to their heart health. Having this information is a real plus! It gives opportunity to change diet and lifestyle factors which gives great promise for lifelong heart health!

There are some specific things you can do to help reduce your risk of heart disease. Below are my top 5.

  •  Your heart is a muscle and needs exercise! If you haven’t exercised in a while, then build slowly.  Start with 5-10 minutes a day and work up to the current guideline of 30 minutes of moderate exercise per day. Women who find a form of exercise they love have the most success – for some it is walking 30 minutes per day with a friend. For others, it is walking 30 minutes a day alone. Other people love yoga, some zumba – and some like to do something different every day!
  • Practice good eating! What you eat definitely affects your insulin levels which will affect your metabolism and your cholesterol. A diet high in vegetables and low in simple carbohydrates and saturated fat can reduce cholesterol levels – sometimes as effectively as statin drugs – without the side effects! I’ve seen many patients change their insulin resistance and lower their cholesterol by following these proven dietary guidelines.
  • Create some good stress management techniques. We all have stressors in our lives – and some we don’t have much control over. What we can control is our reaction to the situation – and we can control what we can do to relieve stress. If it is in your belief system and financially available, therapy can often work to keep stressors in perspective. Journaling, mediation, talking with a friend and support groups can also help. Making a list of those things which cause stress can be helpful, too. Some women find this a powerful tool – they can see exactly how much they are doing – and then make good, realistic decisions about what they want to continue.
  •  Incorporate a medical grade multivitamin-mineral dietary supplement. Its difficult today to get all the nutrients we need from our American diet. We recommend adding a fish oil supplement to your daily regime as well. Nutritional gaps can lead to an inefficient metabolism, inflammation and elevated homocysteine levels which can all affect cardiac function.
  • If testing reveals high levels of CRP (C-Reactive Protein) and LDL, you may want to consider medication. A statin drug such as Lipitor may be warranted, even for a short time to help protect your heart until your dietary and lifestyle changes take effect. I would always recommend taking the lowest effective dose recommended in combination with ribose, L-carnitine, Co-Q10 and selenium supplements to reduce any side effects. Recent studies show that statin drugs do effectively reduce inflammation and cholesterol. If you do take a stain, its important to have your liver enzymes tested regularly to monitor side effects. Aspirin (80-100 mg daily) can also have significant preventative effects.

Some patients who come to see me are just not ready to make lifestyle changes – some don’t feel they have the energy, some don’t see the need, and some tell me that they don’t have the time. My message to patients who feel this way are two fold – first – if you don’t change your life, your life may change you – and sometimes those changes are really hard ones to accept. Secondly, I know you can make changes – one step at a time and those steps are very much worth it, particularly when it comes to your heart health. While a change in heart health along the lifespan is not inevitable, it does affect many of us. Think of the feeling of empowerment when you decide that YOU can take part in the outcome of your health!

So many women come to my office asking about a low fat diet plan for their heart health – and while many are surprised by my answers to them, I am so glad I have the opportunity to set this myth aside. Switching to a low fat diet or low fat food products is not the answer for your heart! This can accelerate the development of a heart condition! A diet rich in healthy fats – unsaturated oils that come from plans and relatively moderate amounts of saturated fats found in meat and dairy products are all heart healthy. Essential fatty acids are vital to your health – they are critical to control insulin, reduce inflammation and most importantly for your heart health to metabolize cholesterol. Avoiding trans fats is paramount. These fats are primarily found in processed foods.

If you are a smoker, I have to implore you to find the support you need to stop. Heart disease and smoking are deathly companions. Smoking increase inflammation, diminishes oxygen uptake, irritates the lungs and makes artherosclerosis worse.

Heart disease doesn’t have to be in your future – you can take control over your heart health! We know that there’s so much that can be done to keep your heart healthy – AND it doesn’t have to be an either/or situation. IF you need the support of a statin drug now it doesn’t mean that you will need this forever – there are changes that you can make which will make a difference!

We all want our hearts to stay healthy, beat strong and sing with joy! Do your part in keeping yours healthy!