
How Minor Car Accidents Can Cause Brain Injury
Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.
While many people usher in the new year with resolutions to achieve better physical health, it’s also important to commit to boosting mental wellness. After all, without maintaining brain health and adopting smart mental health self-care strategies, you can’t reach your fullest potential.
Whether you’re setting mental health goals for 2025 or simply looking for daily mental health habits that can transform your overall wellness year-round, look no further. Dr. Amen’s top 10 brain-based strategies will help you optimize your mental health for the new year and beyond.
Dr. Amen’s top 10 brain-based strategies will help you optimize your mental health for the new year and beyond.
Just like your heart and liver, your brain is an organ—and it creates your mind. You can put your brain at risk through various lifestyle choices, like poor diet and lack of exercise or sleep. Or you can dedicate your efforts to tactics that promote better brain health.
When your brain suffers, your whole life can suffer: relationships, decision making, mental health, and more. On the other hand, when you work to optimize the physical functioning of your brain, you’ll enjoy a better mind—one that fosters more well-being, peace, and happiness in your everyday life.
In decades past, mental health issues were shrouded in stigma, shame, and misconceptions. Even today, individuals may hesitate to seek help for their mental health issues because they don’t want to be viewed as “defective” or “weak.”
However, stats show that if you have mental health symptoms—such as depression, anxiety disorders, memory loss, brain fog, or problems with focus—you’re no longer in a small minority. A wide-scale survey of individuals in 29 countries published in 2023 found that by age 75 about half the population will develop 1 or more of the 13 mental disorders considered.
Remember that asking for help is a sign of strength, and spreading awareness will contribute to ending the shame around mental health conditions.
Do you tend to beat yourself up for failures or bad days? If so, rethink your perspective. Slip-ups, setbacks, and mistakes can offer great lessons if you choose to learn from them rather than use them as evidence of your inadequacy.
In fact, setbacks are part of your progress, not in opposition to them. When you’re enacting any new habit, you’ll need time to adjust. Then, through practice, healthier habits will become automatic. And, when you backslide into old ways, don’t get frustrated—get curious. Ask yourself, “How can I learn from this experience?”
Even though we give simple labels to mental health issues like generalized anxiety disorder and major depressive disorder, we should never treat them as simple or straightforward.
Depression, for example, is a symptom with multiple possible causes, including biological reasons, lifestyle choices, and circumstances such as grief or stress. Amen Clinics has outlined seven types of depression and anxiety, seven types of ADD (attention deficit disorder), also called attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), and six types of addiction.
Therefore, diagnosis and treatment should never be one-size-fits-all. Amen Clinics uses state-of-the-art brain scan technology called SPECT to enable the most effective targeted treatment.
Did you know that you can choose your own mood and attitude, simply by training your mind? You may have already noticed this phenomenon working in your life: When you focus on positive thoughts, you tend to breed more positive thoughts. When you focus on everything that is going (or could go) wrong, you’re more likely to notice the negative.
Your thoughts actually change your brain chemistry. Negative thoughts boost cortisol, the stress hormone, making you feel anxious and depressed. Positive thoughts generate feel-good chemicals, like dopamine and serotonin. To create your own “positivity bias,” make a daily gratitude list or journal about three positive things that happened in your day.
Related to #5 above, negative thinking is a habit like any other—and one you can break by exercising more discipline. First, become familiar with your automatic negative thoughts (ANTs). When you start to examine them and ask yourself if they’re true, you’ll find that they often aren’t based in reality. They also tend to build upon each other, creating further negative thoughts.
You don’t want to engage only in positive thinking, either. Aim instead for accurate thoughts. When your thoughts are realistic rather than falsely positive or doom-and-gloom, you’ll enjoy better mental health and more happiness, while engaging in fewer bad habits.
This phrase, adopted from Byron Katie, refers to the frustration that’s bound to result when you can’t roll with life’s punches. Those who are trapped in rigid thinking patterns, as opposed to embracing cognitive flexibility, create unnecessary suffering for themselves and others.
Instead of fighting reality, focus on what you can control. Notice and redirect negative thinking loops and seek to boost serotonin for better moods. When you go with the flow and adapt to uncertainty, you will create more peace and stability, even amid life’s inevitable stormy periods.
Doctors all too frequently consider prescription medications as the first or only line of defense for mental health issues. Sometimes, these can be helpful components of a treatment plan. But we should never overlook the many natural solutions available to counteract mental health symptoms like depression and anxiety.
Options like supplements, dietary changes, and exercise can make significant impacts on mental health. They can also be affordable (or free), without the side effects that medications may bring. Just make sure that any supplements you take contain clinically studied ingredients that are verified by an independent third party for optimal quality and efficacy.
Diet can aggravate common mental health conditions—including autism, memory problems, ADD/ADHD, and clinical depression—or it can assist in healing the brain and body.
Elimination diets help you find out if certain foods are contributing to physical, mental, cognitive, or behavioral issues. If you’re noticing symptoms associated with mental health disorders, examine and/or adjust your diet. As a bonus, every member of the family, including children and pets, will benefit from eating more brain-healthy foods.
For 2025, you can’t afford not to prioritize fueling your body with a high-quality diet. It will save you untold amounts of money and difficulties in the long term, helping decrease the risk of chronic diseases for years to come.
People often assume that seeking mental health treatment is too expensive or time-consuming. They may believe they’re performing at their best even while struggling with common mental health symptoms.
However, untreated psychiatric issues can take a serious toll. Strained relationships, substance abuse, lost jobs, and underperformance at work or school are just some potential outcomes. Just like maintaining a well-balanced diet, getting mental health help may require money and effort in the short term, but you’ll enjoy major savings over time.
These 10 mental health tips for 2025 may seem like small efforts, but they’re designed to create maximum impacts in your life and health. Even subtle tweaks, with consistent and diligent practice, can make a big difference.
Try a few of them—or all of them—to enjoy major strides in your mental health and prepare to mark significant progress by this time next year.
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
McGrath JJ, et al. Age of onset and cumulative risk of mental disorders: a cross-national analysis of population surveys from 29 countries, The Lancet Psychiatry, Volume 10, Issue 9, 2023, Pages 668-681, ISSN 2215-0366, https://doi.org/10.1016/S2215-0366(23)00193-1. (https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215036623001931)

Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
Every year, millions of American hit the roads and the skies to travel to see loved ones, enjoy destination vacations, or both. For many people, anticipating travel is a mood booster and something to look forward to. However, for many others, travel is fraught with anxiety-inducing uncertainties.
Indeed, the realities of today’s travel—especially air travel—can cause a lot of anxiety about traveling for even those who normally enjoy taking a trip. Flight delays, the possibility of getting sick, unpredictable weather, and unanticipated expenses are just a few conditions that can increase stress levels.
Of course, for the estimated 19.1 percent of Americans who have some type of anxiety disorder, anxious feelings can intensify around travel as well.
If you or someone you love struggles with anxiety about traveling, here are common travel anxiety symptoms to look for, as well as expert tips on how to overcome your travel-related fears.
Travel anxiety is quite simply experiencing fear or anxiousness about any aspect of traveling. For example, you might feel fear or worry about traveling to an unfamiliar or faraway place. You may also experience anxiety while contemplating, booking, preparing for, or during your travels.
Having some stressful and/or anxious feelings about traveling is normal—even necessary to help you to rally and get yourself to your destination. However, disruptive travel anxiety is not normal.
While not a diagnostic term, having a travel anxiety disorder (severe travel anxiety) can deter an individual from ever taking trips at all. For this type of individual, travel and anxiety are inextricably linked.
This can lead to a diminished quality of life. Travel anxiety can prevent a person from enjoying new places, experiencing different cultures, or visiting loved ones.
It’s not exactly clear how many U.S. adults suffer from travel anxiety, but it is believed to be very common. Research from 2023 shows that 2.5% to 40% suffer from a fear of flying (aviophobia) in North America and regions of Europe, depending on how aviophobia is defined.
For individuals who suffer from travel anxiety, simply the idea of going to a new place may bring on feelings of fear and extreme nervousness. Any of the following signs or symptoms of travel anxiety may occur:
There’s no single cause of travel anxiety, but typically there are several factors that lead to its development. Here are the most common causes:
Individuals with anxiety disorders are the most likely candidates to experience increased anxiety about travel, and even phobias about common scenarios that happen while traveling.
Research suggests that the neurobiological cause of specific phobias occurs when fear processing in the amygdala is impaired, which leads to an exaggerated response to threat stimuli. A perceived threat usually triggers travel anxiety.
The most common type of phobia that causes travel anxiety is, as mentioned above, aviophobia or a fear of flying. Individuals with aviophobia may experience overwhelming anxiety about air turbulence, the very idea of flying thousands of feet off the ground, taking off and landing, or the possibility of crashing, to name a few.
An individual may feel overwhelmingly fearful about all these aspects of flying even knowing that air travel is one of the safest forms of travel.
Other specific phobias that can get triggered by travel are agoraphobia (fear of leaving environments that are known and safe) and claustrophobia (fear of confined spaces).
Social anxiety disorder and panic disorder can be at the root of travel anxiety as well. Individuals with these disorders may fear being around or engaging with other people or having a panic attack while flying. These may stem from:
Research has found that mindfulness-based interventions or meditation exercises aimed at calming worry and rumination may be especially effective protectors against anxiety. Download some anxiety-calming guided meditations from apps to listen to before or during your travel.
A 2023 study showed that deep breathing or diaphragmatic breathing diagnostically improves symptoms of anxiety and fewer panic attacks. Taking a few minutes for deep breathing at any point during your travels may almost instantly calm your nervous system and reduce anxiety levels.
Animal studies strongly suggest that regular exercise can do wonders for calming anxiety. Also, yoga and tai chi have been shown to reduce anxiety levels too, according to research. Simply taking a walk can make a difference!
A 2021 scoping review of more than 400 studies found that a dietary pattern with a higher intake of fermented foods, vegetables, fruit, whole grains, fish, legumes, and unprocessed meats was associated with decreased anxiety.
Additionally, increased consumption of culinary herbs and herbal teas; flavonoid-rich foods like dark chocolate and cocoa; phytoestrogenic foods such as soy and nut and seed extracts; and healthy fats such as omega-3s were all associated with lowered anxiety levels.
Do your best to keep anxiety-stoking foods such as alcohol, coffee, refined carbohydrates, saturated fats, artificial sweeteners, and sugar to a minimum and find healthier alternatives.
GABA, l-theanine, magnesium, and vitamin B6 supplements are all known for their calming properties. GABA can be particularly helpful in countering overactivity in your brain’s amygdala, research shows, helping to reduce anxiety. These are great go-to supplements to take when you plan to travel.
Use Dr. Amen’s Kill the ANTs exercise, inspired by author Byron Katie, to counter your negative thoughts. When you have a worrisome or anxious thought, ask yourself several questions.
First, ask “Is it true?” Second, “Am I absolutely certain that it’s true?” Third “What would it feel like to think another thought?” Then meditate or focus on an opposite thought to the one that is torturing you.
For example, if the ANT is “The plane is going to hit turbulence and possibly fall out of the sky,” counter it with “Flying is one of the safest forms of travel. I’m safer flying in the sky than I am driving down on the ground.”
There’s wisdom to the Boys and Girls Scouts’ motto “Be prepared.” There’s even some scientific evidence showing it to be true. Studies show that both informational preparation and psychological preparedness can reduce anxiety before a stressful exam or medical procedure.
Prepare yourself for your upcoming travel by taking actions to help alleviate your anxieties. Here are several examples of actions you can take:
If your anxiety is more than mild and interferes with your ability or desire to travel, reach out to a qualified mental health professional.
Cognitive behavioral therapy, exposure therapy, and virtual reality-based gradual exposure methods have all been shown to be effective in reducing travel anxiety. Learning about your triggers related to travel and how to deal with them can be an important aspect in helping you to overcome travel anxiety.
Getting professional help for other underlying anxiety disorders is critical too. When necessary, some forms of medications may also be helpful.
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
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Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
Do you want to feel healthier, happier, and more hopeful in the new year? A great place to start is to focus on mental health growth. Since mental health starts with brain health, your pathway begins with developing brain healthy habits. When you make changes to your lifestyle that support brain health, your emotional and mental well-being improve too.
What does goal setting for mental wellness look like? It’s not making bold new year’s resolutions, which tend to be unrealistic and are often abandoned by mid-January, according to market research. Lasting change is attained by focusing on making new behavior a daily habit—by aiming for your big overall goal with small, doable regular actions.
Indeed, brain and mental wellness require daily practices, which are needed now more than ever as levels of anxiety, depression, memory issues, ADHD, PTSD, and bipolar disorder steadily increase.
Here are our best mental health tips for 2025, culled from the mental health experts at Amen Clinics. Consider them your roadmap to improve mental well-being in the new year!
Personal development goals for mental wellness must include learning to overcome habitual negative self-talk.
Negative self-talk is insidiously harmful, and it all starts in the brain. Your brain is always on, listening to all of your thoughts. When you have a positive, uplifting thought, it triggers your brain to release chemicals that affect all of the cells within your body, which make you feel good. However, when you have a negative thought, your brain releases chemicals that make you feel bad.
Rumination and self-blame are associated with a higher risk of mental health disorders, research has found. Worried, stressful and negative thoughts can also make existing mental health issues worse. It’s important to your mental health to combat these automatic negative thoughts (ANTs).
You can calm these stressful thoughts by practicing mindfulness techniques such as meditation, yoga, or tai chi—all of which promote relaxation in the mind and body. You can also combat them directly with this technique inspired by the work of author and self-help expert Byron Katie:
Part of enjoying mental wellness is having a sincere appreciation for the good in yourself and in your life. Research indicates that recognizing what you are grateful for helps to calm the deep limbic system in the brain and amplifies the judgment centers.
Individuals who regularly express gratitude are healthier, more optimistic, make better progress toward meaningful goals, enjoy a greater sense of well-being, and are more helpful to others.
Cultivating a mindset of gratitude is more than saying thank you now and again (although that’s a great practice); it is developing the ability to find gratitude for blessings received amidst hardships, challenges, and setbacks.
Here are some tips for cultivating gratitude:
As human beings, we require connection with others, a feeling of belonging, and an overall sense of community. Make sure you focus on strengthening your social connections as one of your personal development goals for mental wellness. Isolation and poor mental health travel together. Indeed, research shows that a lack of social connections is associated with higher rates of depression and anxiety.
We have a deep need to feel seen and heard by others. If you focus on strengthening your friendships, relationships with family, coworkers, and the community at large, you’ll be bolstering your well-being perhaps more than you know.
Here are some ideas to make that happen:
Of all the new year mental health resolutions you could make, consistently getting quality sleep each night is a chart topper. That’s because adequate sleep is critical to brain function and emotional well-being.
Brain cells repair themselves during sleep and brain toxins that build up throughout the day are washed away. Neuronal connections vulnerable to deterioration are activated.
Research shows that sleep deprivation interferes with connections between the brain’s prefrontal cortex (an area involved in judgment, planning, and impulse control) and the limbic system (emotional centers) and the reward network. This can lead to poor judgment and irrational behavior—quite the opposite of mental well-being!
Poor sleep is also associated with many types of health issues and diseases including depression, anxiety, type 2 diabetes, Alzheimer’s disease, poor decision-making, weight gain, and more.
Improve mental health in 2025 simply by creating a sleep routine that allows you to get 7-9 hours of sleep a night.
If you think your sleeping issues may relate to a sleep condition, reach out to a sleep specialist, such as Dr. Shane Creado at Amen Clinics, and/or get tested for obstructive sleep apnea.
When setting mental health priorities, don’t overlook your diet. What you habitually eat has a major impact on your overall brain health, mood, and mental health—for better or worse.
Research has found poor nutrition plays a crucial factor in the high prevalence and incidence of mental health disorders. On the flip side, eating brain-healthy foods enhances mental wellness.
One study found that the number of servings of fruits and vegetables you consume is directly tied to your level of happiness. For every serving you eat (up to eight per day) the happier you become. And it happens nearly instantly—faster than prescription antidepressants!
Regularly engaging in some form of exercise offers up mental health benefits such as stress relief, a more positive outlook, better sleep, and a greater ability to manage low mood and anxious symptoms. That’s a lot of mental health bang for your buck!
In the spirit of making achievable mental health goals, gently increase your movement if you have been mostly sedentary. Find exercise that you enjoy (or at least are willing to do!) at your current fitness level.
That could be as simple as a walk. Even 30 minutes of walking a day can boost your mood. That might look like a 15-minute walk in the morning and evening. Research shows that strength training can also be effective in helping to reduce anxiety levels. Stretching offers up mental health benefits too, research has found!
Find ways to make movement a fun, regular habit. Buddy up with a friend to walk on a regular basis. Go for a weekly hike with your family. Take a yoga class. Garden. Dance around to music. Try pickleball. Explore and find exercise that resonates with you.
If you have undiagnosed and/or untreated mental health conditions like anxiety or depression, it can be challenging to stick to brain healthy habits.
If you’re struggling with a substance abuse problem, behavioral addiction, or eating disorder—efforts to improve mental health will be sabotaged until you address these issues. To successfully improve mental well-being in the new year, it is essential to get targeted treatment for any mental disorders you may have.
Start with a full psychiatric evaluation from a qualified mental health professional so you can get an accurate diagnosis and customized treatment. Primary care physicians, admittedly, are not as well trained to deal with mental health conditions and lack confidence in prescribing psychiatric medications, according to survey research.
Amen Clinics’ comprehensive approach recognizes that mental health disorders and substance abuse problems come in many shapes and sizes. More than 250,000 brain scans have shown that mental conditions have multiple types—and each type needs its own tailored treatment.
Additionally, Amen Clinics understands that mental health conditions are brain health disorders. Brain SPECT imaging is used to see how the brain is working as part of an evaluation. SPECT imaging looks at blood flow in the brain, revealing where the brain works too hard, not enough, or about right. It plays a big role in developing a targeted treatment.
A comprehensive treatment plan may include lifestyle changes, nutraceuticals, therapy and, when necessary, medication. About 85% of those who are treated at Amen Clinics report a better quality of life after six months of treatment. These are some of the highest success rates published, compared to up to 60% of people with mental health disorders who experience treatment resistance.
Achieving better mental health is indeed possible, but it requires sustained effort and support. To better ensure success, share your goals with trusted friends and family members who can support you. Work with a therapist or coach, if need be.
To keep you motivated, listen to the Change Your Brain Every Day podcast hosted by Dr. Amen and his wife Tana Amen. In each weekly episode, they provide brain health tips and practical strategies to improve mental well-being.
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
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Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
What makes a mental health condition more perilous than others? Among the most common self-harm conditions are those associated with self-injury or suicide, which can stem from untreated mental health issues. And it is more common than you might imagine.
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, 20% of adults in the U.S. have a mental disorder of some type. This means almost 53 million Americans are struggling with mental health issues that have a wide array of symptoms ranging from mild to severe that may include self-injury.
It is crucial to address the underlying mental health conditions that drive these behaviors and seek help from a mental health provider. Could you or a loved one be at risk?
Self-injury, also known as self-harm or non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI), involves deliberately hurting oneself without the intention of causing a lethal injury. This behavior can take many forms, including cutting, burning, biting, carving, scratching the skin, or hitting oneself.
Although these actions may provide temporary relief from stress, painful memories, and difficult emotions, they are maladaptive coping mechanisms that can lead to more severe mental health issues.
People who self-injure often do so to express emotions they cannot verbalize, to regain a sense of control, or to distract themselves from emotional pain. However, self-injury is not a sustainable or healthy way to manage emotions.
It is crucial to address the underlying mental health conditions that drive these behaviors and seek help from a mental health professional.
When a person deliberately hurts the surface of their body without intending to cause a lethal injury, it is referred to as self-harm or non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI), which are common self-harm behaviors. Repeatedly cutting, burning, biting, carving, and scratching the skin or hitting oneself are common forms of NSSI.
Although these are maladaptive coping mechanisms, such behaviors can temporarily provide a sense of relief from stress, painful memories, and difficult emotions—or even give someone a sense of control when faced with uncertain circumstances. For some people, it may also be a way to express suicidal thoughts to avert the possibility of acting on them.
Unfortunately, the symptoms of some mental health disorders can feel intolerable to those suffering from them and suicide might feel like the only way out.
In 2019, the CDC reported that suicide was the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S., and for individuals between the ages of 10 and 34, it was the 2nd highest cause of mortality. Research has also found that people who engage in NSSI are at a much higher risk for suicide compared with the general population.
People self-harm for a variety of reasons, including:
Self-harm can be a way for individuals to deal with negative feelings, such as low self-esteem, anxiety, or depression. However, self-harm is not a sustainable or healthy way to manage emotions.
Seeking help from a mental health professional is essential for recovery, as they can provide the necessary support and treatment to address the underlying issues and develop healthier coping strategies.
The potential for severe symptoms in common self-harm conditions makes individuals more vulnerable to engaging in self-injury or even suicidal behaviors. Understanding these conditions is crucial for effective intervention.
While not an exhaustive list, here are seven of the most common disorders that have an increased risk for these behaviors:
Approximately half of the people with bipolar disorder engage in NSSI at least once in their life, according to a study published in the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease.
Because symptoms in this condition can be very severe, the lifetime risk for suicidal behavior is believed to be about 20 to 30 times greater for those who have it. Sadly, 5-6% will intentionally end their life.
Females with bipolar disorder tend to make more suicide attempts, but males are more likely to have fatal results. While some factors influence suicidality in this condition, research has found that the most prominent one is a depressed mood state—which, in bipolar disorder, can be debilitating.
Characterized by impulsivity and instability in many areas of life, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorders (DSM-5TR) also includes repeated self-harming behavior as well as suicidal thoughts, threats, and attempts as one of the criteria for a diagnosis of this condition.
Repeated incidents of NSSI are common in borderline personality disorder and may be used to help manage the intense emotions they experience, offset feelings of unhappiness, or cope with distress. Self-harm may also occur during dissociative states.
Suicidal behavior is prevalent too. While some threats may be attempts to avoid abandonment or for other manipulative purposes, the risk of completed suicide for those with borderline personality is as high as 6%.
The previously referenced research from the Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease also found that 37% of people with unipolar depression (as opposed to bipolar depression) had engaged in NSSI at least once.
What’s even more concerning, however, is that some of the symptoms inherent in this disorder—especially hopelessness and an inability to experience joy or pleasure in life—are known to increase the chances of making a suicide attempt. Overall, people suffering from major depressive disorder have a 17-fold greater risk of taking their own life.
Depression often co-occurs with anxiety disorders, such as generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and social anxiety disorder, which can significantly contribute to self-injury behaviors. Individuals with these conditions often experience overwhelming feelings of fear, worry, and apprehension.
In an attempt to cope with these intense emotions, they may turn to self-injury as a temporary relief. However, this behavior can exacerbate the underlying anxiety disorder, creating a vicious cycle of distress and self-harm.
Mental health professionals play a crucial role in helping individuals with anxiety disorders develop healthier coping mechanisms. Through helpful forms of therapy and, in some cases, medication, they can address the root causes of anxiety and reduce the reliance on self-injury as a coping strategy.
Early trauma, such as physical or emotional abuse, neglect, or bullying, can have a profound impact on an individual’s mental health. Those who experience early trauma may develop negative coping mechanisms, including self-injury, to deal with their emotions. Although self-injury may provide temporary relief from emotional pain, it can perpetuate a cycle of negative behaviors and further harm mental health.
A study published in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health found that individuals with four or more adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) were more likely to repeatedly engage in NSSI and had a 12 times greater risk of committing suicide.
Mental health professionals can help individuals who have experienced early trauma by providing therapy and support to develop healthier coping mechanisms. Addressing the underlying mental health conditions is crucial for breaking the cycle of self-injury and promoting long-term recovery.
Some people who experience trauma can develop post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), a severe mental health condition. Individuals with PTSD often suffer from flashbacks, nightmares, and severe anxiety, which can lead them to engage in self-injury behaviors. For some, self-injury becomes a way to cope with overwhelming emotions and regain a sense of control over their lives.
However, self-injury can worsen PTSD symptoms and increase the risk of suicidal behaviors. Individuals with PTSD need to seek professional treatment, such as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) and medication, to manage their symptoms and develop healthier coping mechanisms.
Self-harming behaviors often accompany this group of mental health conditions—especially anorexia and bulimia—which most frequently affect adolescents. A study that analyzed the relationship between NSSI and eating disorders found up to 42% of people with anorexia and as much as 55% of those with bulimia engaged in self-harming behaviors.
According to the DSM-5TR, 25-33% of people with bulimia struggle with suicidal thoughts and attempts, while suicide is the second leading cause of death for those suffering from anorexia.
Self-harm is not unusual for people who have this severe mental illness. In fact, researchers studying NSSI in those with schizophrenia found that when they had a co-occurring substance use disorder (mostly cannabis), the prevalence of self-harm was 43.6%.
Suicidal ideation is also very common in this condition and 20% of people who are schizophrenic will attempt suicide at least once. Sometimes the decision to do so is the result of delusions or demands that come from their hallucinations. There is a high lifetime risk for suicide and 5-6% of people with this condition will intentionally end their life.
Addictions are often linked to untreated mental health problems, including all the ones listed above. Therefore, it is not surprising that self-harming behaviors are also found in some people who struggle with alcohol or substance abuse, which by their inherent nature, exacerbate underlying psychiatric symptoms.
Even outside the presence of addiction, it is well-established that alcohol and illicit drugs diminish a person’s judgment and impulse control, which can increase the possibility that an act of intentional self-harm will accidentally cause a fatal injury.
Furthermore, disinhibition combined with the intensity of painful emotions can elevate the chance of someone becoming suicidal. Research that examined the suicide risk in people with alcohol and opiate use disorders found that at the time they took their own life, 22% had used alcohol, 20% had used opioids, and 10.2% had used marijuana.
Many people who struggle with these conditions have more than one type of mental health problem, thus increasing the risk of self-harm and suicide.
For example, about 50% of those with bipolar disorder also have alcohol use disorder, which can significantly worsen symptoms, especially during a depressed or psychotic state. Many people with borderline personality have co-occurring depression or bipolar disorder, substance abuse, an eating disorder, or other mental health conditions.
Understand that spotting the warning signs of self-injury can be challenging. For instance, in hot weather, children may conceal self-harm injuries by wearing long sleeves or jewelry, making it challenging to recognize the signs of self-harm.
These complex problems illustrate the critical importance of getting correctly diagnosed and receiving effective treatment as soon as possible to help stop the consequences of self-harming behaviors and offset the potential for a tragic ending.
***PLEASE NOTE:***If you observe warning signs of self-harm on a loved one (i.e. otherwise unexplainable scars, cuts, and bruises), talk with them about what is going on in their life—without judging or shaming—and encourage them to accept the need for professional help.
If you notice someone making statements about not wanting to be alive, it is a cry for help and should be taken seriously. Or, if a loved one is giving away their belongings, finalizing business matters, or purchasing a weapon or other lethal means, consider it an urgent situation that needs to be addressed immediately by a mental health professional. Call 911 or take the person to the nearest emergency room if you believe they are in crisis.
If you have concerns for yourself or someone you know, put the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline numbers in your phone directory: 800-273-8255 and 988. It is staffed 24/7 by trained counselors who provide compassionate and knowledgeable support as well as connections to helpful resources.
AMEN CLINICS DOES NOT PROVIDE CRISIS SERVICES
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
Singhal A, Ross J, Seminog O, Hawton K, Goldacre MJ. Risk of self-harm and suicide in people with specific psychiatric and physical disorders: comparisons between disorders using English national record linkage. J R Soc Med. 2014 May;107(5):194-204. doi: 10.1177/0141076814522033. PMID: 24526464; PMCID: PMC4023515.
Weintraub MJ, Van de Loo MM, Gitlin MJ, Miklowitz DJ. Self-Harm, Affective Traits, and Psychosocial Functioning in Adults With Depressive and Bipolar Disorders. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2017 Nov;205(11):896-899. doi: 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000744. PMID: 29077652; PMCID: PMC5679240.
Dome P, Rihmer Z, Gonda X. Suicide Risk in Bipolar Disorder: A Brief Review. Medicina (Kaunas). 2019 Jul 24;55(8):403. doi: 10.3390/medicina55080403. PMID: 31344941; PMCID: PMC6723289.
Cleare S, Wetherall K, Clark A, Ryan C, Kirtley OJ, Smith M, O’Connor RC. Adverse Childhood Experiences and Hospital-Treated Self-Harm. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018 Jun 11;15(6):1235. doi: 10.3390/ijerph15061235. PMID: 29891825; PMCID: PMC6026473.
Rodríguez-López Á, Rodríguez-Ortiz E, Romero-Gonzalez B. Non-suicidal self-injury in patients with eating disorders: nuclear aspects. Colomb Med (Cali). 2021 Feb 12;52(1):e2044342. doi: 10.25100/cm.v51i4.4342. PMID: 33911321; PMCID: PMC8054705.
Güney E, Alnıak İ, Erkıran M. Predicting factors for non-suicidal self-injury in patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorders and the role of substance use. Asian J Psychiatr. 2020 Aug;52:102068. doi: 10.1016/j.ajp.2020.102068. Epub 2020 Apr 21. PMID: 32371364.
Rizk, M.M., Herzog, S., Dugad, S. et al. Suicide Risk and Addiction: The Impact of Alcohol and Opioid Use Disorders. Curr Addict Rep 8, 194–207 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40429-021-00361-z

Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
Is there a link between anxiety and dementia? The answer appears to be a resounding yes. Anxiety is commonly seen in individuals with certain types of dementia. However, researchers are increasingly studying anxiety as a potential risk factor for dementia.
Indeed, a growing body of research suggests that anxiety experienced earlier in life might have a causal effect on the development of dementia later in life. Individuals with mild cognitive impairment may have a higher risk of developing dementia, which is relevant to the discussion about anxiety as a potential risk factor.
Anxiety disorders are the most common mental disorder affecting more than 40 million U.S. adults. Considering just 43.2% get proper treatment, the implications for dementia risk are significant. Here’s what you need to know about anxiety and its potential role in the development of dementia. Plus, you’ll discover ways to keep your anxiety levels in check.
General anxiety disorder (GAD) is characterized by persistent feelings of fear, worry, and unease. An individual’s anxious feelings are uncontrollable, and they are typically out of proportion for a particular situation or stressor.
This is different than the transitory anxiety we all experience. This type of anxiousness is usually related to an event or situation, such as the first day on a new job, a first date, or an exam.
People who have general anxiety disorders worry and feel nervous most of the time about everyday activities that do not pose a threat. Anxiety is disproportionately more common in women, teens, and those affected with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), also known as attention-deficit disorder (ADD).
Common physical symptoms of anxiety include insomnia, heart palpitations (panic attacks), trouble concentrating, and dizziness. Anxiety disorder symptoms can run the gamut from mild (such as nervous feelings, tending to imagine the worst, or feeling tensed up) to severe (such as suicidal thoughts).
When anxiety goes untreated, it can wreak havoc in your life. It can put an individual at risk for other mental health conditions and physical health issues such as:
Mounting research suggests that untreated anxiety may impact your brain in such a way that it also sets you up for dementia later in life.
BASICS ABOUT DEMENTIA
Dementia is defined as a general and pervasive deterioration of memory, as well as at least one other cognitive ability, such as language and executive function. This can be due to various causes. The loss of cognitive function is pronounced enough to negatively impact an individual’s normal daily functioning, work, and social life.
Alzheimer’s disease is the most common form of dementia, accounting for 60-80% of memory loss cases. Ongoing research has shown connections between Alzheimer’s disease and various factors, such as stress and emotional dysregulation, indicating the complexity of its development and progression. But there are many other types of dementia, including:
Regardless of the type of dementia, memory loss is not normal, even for aging people.
There are multiple dementia causes or risk factors that lead to its development. In addition to the recent study findings suggesting anxiety as a risk factor, other common causes may include any of the following:
A marked association between anxiety and dementia has been noted in multiple studies over the past decade. However, until recently, researchers were not sure if anxiety was an early symptom of dementia or an independent risk factor.
Research findings indicate that individuals with mild cognitive impairment may have a higher risk of converting to dementia compared to those who are cognitively intact. This is relevant to the association between anxiety and dementia, as studies have included cohorts of participants with mild cognitive impairment to examine this link.
A systematic review published in the January 2022 issue of BMJ Open points to the latter. The review included four reliable studies involving close to 30,000 participants. All four studies indicated a positive connection between moderate to severe anxiety and the development of dementia later in life.
The researchers concluded, “Clinically significant anxiety in midlife was associated with an increased risk of dementia over at least 10 years.”
What’s more, the review’s authors noted that the findings indicate anxiety may be a risk factor for late-life dementia—and not a symptom. The authors additionally suggested that the link may be explained by the excessive stress response triggered by the anxiety.
Indeed, chronic stress and anxiety can cause ongoing suppression of the prefrontal cortex, as well as hippocampus atrophy, research has noted. These actions contribute to the development of dementia.
Another study found that chronic phobic anxiety may shorten telomere length in middle-aged and older women. Telomeres are structures found at the ends of chromosomes made from DNA sequences and proteins. Like the end of a shoelace, telomeres cap and protect the end of a chromosome from getting tangled or frayed.
Telomere length shortens with age. Shortened telomere length is associated with a greater likelihood of disease and poor survival. The study indicated that untreated chronic phobic anxiety is a possible risk factor for accelerated aging. Other research shows that short telomeres are associated with a greater risk of neurological and psychiatric disorders including dementia.
Emotional dysregulation, which is common with anxiety disorders, may also play into the development of dementia recent research indicates. It appears that emotional dysregulation can adversely impact the posterior cingulate and the amygdala—areas heavily involved in autobiographical memory and regulating emotions.
Regardless of the specific cause, anxiety is undoubtedly linked to an increased risk of developing dementia, especially as we grow older.
Anxiety can have a profound impact on cognitive function, particularly as we age. Research has shown that anxiety can impair attention, memory, and processing speed, leading to cognitive impairment. This can make everyday tasks more challenging and affect an individual’s ability to maintain independence.
Anxiety often reduces the ability to focus and pay attention, making it difficult to concentrate on tasks. This can be particularly problematic for older adults, who may already be experiencing some degree of cognitive decline. Additionally, anxiety can affect memory, making it harder to learn new information and recall existing memories.
Chronic anxiety can also lead to structural changes in the brain. Studies have shown that prolonged anxiety can reduce the volume of the hippocampus, a region critical for memory and learning. This reduction in hippocampal volume is associated with cognitive decline and an increased risk of developing dementia.
Moreover, anxiety can exacerbate existing cognitive decline, creating a vicious cycle where anxiety and cognitive impairment feed into each other. This highlights the importance of managing anxiety to protect cognitive function and reduce the risk of dementia.
Stress is a well-known risk factor for dementia, and chronic stress can significantly accelerate cognitive decline. When we experience stress, our body’s “fight or flight” response is triggered, releasing stress hormones like cortisol. While this response is beneficial in short bursts, chronically elevated cortisol levels can be detrimental to the brain.
Chronic stress can lead to structural changes in the brain, including reduced volume in the hippocampus and prefrontal cortex. These areas are crucial for memory, learning, and executive function. Prolonged exposure to high levels of cortisol can damage these brain regions, leading to cognitive impairment and increasing the risk of dementia.
Additionally, stress can promote inflammation and oxidative stress, both of which are linked to cognitive decline and dementia. Inflammation can damage brain cells and disrupt neural communication, while oxidative stress can lead to the accumulation of harmful molecules that further damage brain tissue.
Research has shown that managing stress through relaxation techniques, regular exercise, and social support can help mitigate the risk of dementia. By reducing stress levels, we can protect our brain health and potentially delay or prevent the onset of cognitive decline.
Assessing individual risk for dementia is crucial for identifying those who may benefit from early intervention and prevention strategies. Several factors can increase the risk of dementia, including age, family history, and lifestyle choices.
Age is the greatest risk factor for dementia, with the risk increasing significantly after the age of 65. However, it’s not the only factor to consider. Family history also plays a role, particularly if a first-degree relative has been diagnosed with dementia. This genetic predisposition can increase an individual’s risk of developing the condition.
Lifestyle factors are also important to consider. Physical inactivity, social isolation, and a poor diet can all increase the risk of dementia. Engaging in regular physical activity, maintaining social connections, and following a healthy diet can help reduce this risk.
By assessing individual risk factors, healthcare providers can identify those who may benefit from early intervention and prevention strategies. This proactive approach can help delay the onset of dementia and improve the quality of life for those at risk.
In conclusion, understanding the impact of anxiety and stress on cognitive function, as well as assessing individual risk factors, is essential for mitigating the risk of dementia. By addressing these factors early on, we can take steps to protect our brain health and maintain cognitive function as we age.
You may wonder, “If anxiety is to blame for accelerated cognitive decline, does this mean that alleviating anxiety would minimize the risk of dementia?” It’s an excellent question that remains unanswered by science.
That said, there are many lifestyle actions you can take that can relieve anxiety. This can make you feel better in the short term and may possibly protect you against memory loss issues in the future.
Here are five natural ways to reduce your anxiety levels.
Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) helps to address negative self-talk and is the most effective therapy for reducing anxiety. Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy helps reduce stress and anxiety related to trauma.
For example, coffee is associated with higher levels of anxiety as are many inflammatory foods. Consider a calming alternative to coffee like green tea, which still promotes alertness and mental clarity. You can also take nutritional supplements with calming ingredients like l-theanine (extracted from green tea), GABA, saffron, or magnesium.
Yoga, tai chi, biofeedback, and meditation have been shown to provide relaxation benefits according to research. Of course, a simple walk in nature can help alleviate anxiety too.
Anxiety can constrict your breathing to rapid, shallow breaths, which may impact your blood’s oxygen levels and increase anxiety further. Calm your nervous system by repeating 10 cycles of deep breathing. Research shows that diaphragmatic breathing practices may help bring down stress and anxiety levels.
Research indicates acupuncture may help to alleviate anxiety. Also, hypnosis, guided imagery, listening to soothing music, or progressive muscle relaxation may help to lessen anxiety and even offer additional benefits like better sleep.
If you struggle with anxiety, it doesn’t mean that you will develop dementia. But it is a warning signal to address it right away. Don’t hesitate to reach out to a mental health professional for help.
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
Gimson A, Schlosser M, Huntley JD, et al. Support for midlife anxiety diagnosis as an independent risk factor for dementia: a systematic review. BMJ Open 2018;8:e019399. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019399
Ávila-Villanueva M, Gómez-Ramírez J, Maestú F, Venero C, Ávila J and Fernández-Blázquez MA (2020) The Role of Chronic Stress as a Trigger for the Alzheimer Disease Continuum. Front. Aging Neurosci. 12:561504. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2020.561504
Okereke OI, Prescott J, Wong JYY, et al. High phobic anxiety is related to lower leukocyte telomere length in women. PLOS ONE 2012;7. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0040516
Topiwala A, Nichols TE, Williams LZJ, et al. Telomere length and brain imaging phenotypes in UK Biobank. PLOS ONE 2023;18. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0282363
Baez-Lugo, Sebastian, et al. “Exposure to negative socio-emotional events induces sustained alteration of resting-state brain networks in older adults.” Nature Aging, 12 January 2023.

Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
When 14-year-old Elizabeth Smart was kidnapped from her bedroom in 2002, it made headline news across the nation and around the world. During her captivity, the young teen was repeatedly raped, chained up, and forced to follow her kidnappers’ every command. When Elizabeth was finally rescued nine months later, most people wondered if she could ever have a normal life.
Many people believe that everyone who endures a severe traumatic experience will develop posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). But that’s not true. Research shows that in some people, trauma ultimately leads to posttraumatic growth (PTG)—positive changes in a person’s life.
That’s what happened to Elizabeth, as she reveals on the Change Your Brain Every Day podcast hosted by Dr. Daniel Amen.
“It was the worst nine months of my life,” recalls Elizabeth. “But once I was rescued, I didn’t want to lose the rest of my life to what had happened the last nine months.”
Elizabeth Smart
How can some people find hope in the aftermath of trauma? “There are certain decisions you make that either increase the likelihood of trauma or decrease it,” says Dr. Amen in the podcast episode.
In this blog, you’ll discover the decisions and traits that help lead to posttraumatic growth.
Trauma significantly alters brain activity. Brain SPECT imaging studies at Amen Clinics show that people who have experienced major traumatic events tend to have overactivity in the emotional centers of the brain in a diamond pattern.
According to a study in Plos One that used thousands of brain scans from Amen Clinics, overactivity occurs in the following brain regions:
Simultaneously, trauma reduces activity in the prefrontal cortex (PFC), which is responsible for impulse regulation, decision-making, empathy, and forward planning.
This imbalance means individuals with trauma often experience heightened fear responses (elevated amygdala activity) alongside diminished self-control (reduced PFC activity).
This mix of increased fear and reduced self-regulation often drives individuals toward self-medicating behaviors. Common coping mechanisms include using substances like alcohol, marijuana, or opiates. Other people turn to high-sugar diets as a way to self-soothe.
While these may temporarily soothe the amygdala and alleviate anxiety, they further suppress PFC activity, reducing control over such habits and creating a vicious cycle of escalating problems.
But it doesn’t have to.
According to Dr. Amen, a person’s brain health prior to trauma plays a major role in the resulting impacts following a traumatic experience.
“The brain you bring into the trauma determines the brain you have when you get out"
Dr. Amen.
For example, growing up in a home filled with stability, love, and connection, as Elizabeth did, enhances brain health. Her SPECT scans, which she sees for the first time on the Change Your Brain Every Day podcast, reveal the impacts of her experiences on her brain.
Dr. Amen suggests that having a healthier brain going into the trauma likely enabled her to cope better with the horrors of her captivity.
Compare her experience to a child who grew up in a chaotic environment with alcoholic, neglectful parents. The chronic stress of this type of upbringing harms the brain and drains resilience, which would have made it much harder for someone to withstand the additional trauma of a kidnapping.
When stresses and traumas are compounded, it increases the likelihood of lasting negative consequences, such as PTSD.
One fascinating area of trauma research focuses on posttraumatic growth (PTG), a concept introduced in the mid-1990s by psychologists Richard Tedeschi and Lawrence Calhoun from the University of North Carolina at Charlotte. PTG refers to the positive transformation that can occur following adversity.
Their research shows that when groups of people endure trauma—whether from personal loss, natural disasters, major life transitions, or even kidnapping—they respond differently.
This growth is driven by five key factors, captured by the mnemonic SPARK:
In Elizabeth’s case, she turned her pain into purpose by creating the Elizabeth Smart Foundation, which brings hope and empowerment to victims of sexual assault.
Following her kidnapping and captivity, Elizabeth returned to playing the harp and majored in music in college. Plus, she has written two books, My Story and Where There’s Hope.
Practicing positive thinking and mental self-care can further enhance this inner strength. “If I can survive that, I can survive anything,” became Elizabeth’s mantra.
By nurturing these factors, individuals can plant the seeds for growth, turning challenges into opportunities for a stronger, more meaningful future. Whether facing personal, professional, or societal adversity, post-traumatic growth offers a powerful reminder that growth and transformation are possible even in the face of hardship.
In addition to these elements, it’s critical to rehabilitate the brain after experiencing trauma, whether it’s emotional trauma, sexual abuse, natural disaster, or some other life-changing event.
This is especially important if a person has been self-medicating with substances like alcohol or marijuana.
According to the experts at Amen Clinics, healing the brain post trauma may involve avoiding harmful substances, taking nutritional supplements, consuming brain healthy foods, exercising regularly, engaging in helpful forms of psychotherapy, and in some cases, taking medication.
Dell’Osso, Liliana et al. “Post Traumatic Growth (PTG) in the Frame of Traumatic Experiences.” Clinical neuropsychiatry vol. 19,6 (2022): 390-393. doi:10.36131/cnfioritieditore20220606
Tedeschi, R G, and L G Calhoun. “The Posttraumatic Growth Inventory: measuring the positive legacy of trauma.” Journal of traumatic stress vol. 9,3 (1996): 455-71. doi:10.1007/BF02103658
Amen DG, et al. Functional Neuroimaging Distinguishes Posttraumatic Stress Disorder from Traumatic Brain Injury in Focused and Large Community Datasets. Plos One, July 1, 2015. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0129659

Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
Memories make up the fabric of our lives. When memory problems occur, it’s like losing important pieces of ourselves, and it can impair every aspect of our lives. No problem is more closely associated with memory loss than Alzheimer’s disease, one of the most feared and devastating illnesses of all.
About 7 million Americans are currently living with Alzheimer’s, and that number is expected to nearly double by 2050. There is no cure on the horizon, but research shows that you can reduce your risk for Alzheimer’s disease and other types of dementia.
A 2024 study, published in The Lancet, concluded that eliminating, treating, or reducing 14 risk factors could delay or prevent nearly half of all cases of dementia worldwide.
This headline-making research comes nearly 20 years after Dr. Daniel Amen’s groundbreaking book Preventing Alzheimer’s, in which he outlined lifestyle changes that can reduce your risk for the disease. And it comes seven years after Dr. Amen’s book Memory Rescue, in which he detailed how many of the same modifiable risk factors included in The Lancet study can decrease your chances of developing the disease.
Additional brain-imaging research, including a study in Neurodegenerative Disease, shows that changes in the brain associated with Alzheimer’s begin decades before symptoms appear. This research suggests that the best way to sharpen your memory, reverse brain aging, and prevent Alzheimer’s and other dementia types is to eliminate, prevent, or treat all of the risk factors that steal your mind.
Dr. Amen coined the acronym BRIGHT MINDS to help you remember the 11 major risk factors for memory loss, including Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias.
Blood flow is critical for brain health. Surprisingly, the blood vessels that feed our brain cells age faster than those neurons, so keeping your brain healthy means taking care of your blood vessels.
A history of high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, or a lack of physical exercise are common risk factors for blood flow problems. Managing high blood pressure through lifestyle changes and medication can improve blood flow and reduce the risks of cognitive decline and cardiovascular diseases.
R is for retirement, aging, and cognitive decline.
When you stop learning your brain starts dying. Your brain is like a muscle—the more you use it, the more you can use.
Advancing age is the single most important risk for memory loss and Alzheimer’s disease. A lack of new learning, social isolation, and loneliness increase the risk of age-related cognitive decline and memory problems.
Chronic inflammation harms your organs and can destroy your brain. Eating a diet of fast foods and processed foods is pro-inflammatory.
Having low omega-3 levels or high C-reactive protein levels in the blood are indicators of high inflammation.
Having a family history of Alzheimer’s disease or other forms of dementia increases your risk. However, a genetic vulnerability is not a death sentence.
It should be a wake-up call to proactively manage factors like blood pressure, as this can potentially reduce dementia risk.
Concussions and other traumatic brain injuries—even head injuries without a loss of consciousness—are major risk factors for memory problems. Having multiple head injuries increases your risk of cognitive decline.
Exposure to environmental toxins has been linked to health problems ranging from allergies and cancer to autoimmune and neurodegenerative diseases. Alcohol, marijuana, and other drugs prematurely age the brain, as do other toxins such as mold.
That’s because our bodies’ detoxification systems (the gut, liver, kidneys, and skin), can become overwhelmed, damaging the brain, and increasing the risk of memory problems, dementia, and cognitive impairment.
The health of your mind is an essential factor in the health of your memory. Mental health issues including depression, bipolar disorder, ADD/ADHD, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and chronic stress can all contribute to a higher risk of memory problems.
When your immune system isn’t functioning optimally, you may be more vulnerable to autoimmune disorders and infections (such as COVID-19), which can increase your risk of brain fog and memory issues.
The brain plays an important role in hormone production and is significantly influenced by hormones from other areas of the body. When hormone levels (such as thyroid, testosterone, or estrogen) are out of balance, you may be more prone to Alzheimer’s disease, as well as depression, diabetes, and other illnesses.
The word “diabesity” combines diabetes and obesity, both of which decrease the size and function of your brain. Diabetes damages blood vessels and eventually creates havoc throughout the body and brain, leading to cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s disease, vascular dementia, stroke, hypertension, and more.
Research in the journal Neurology shows that being overweight or obese in midlife is also associated with dementia later in life.
Decades of research have linked sleep problems, such as insomnia and sleep apnea, to a higher risk of memory problems and dementia. A 2021 study in Nature Communications found that people in their 50s and 60s who sleep less than 6 hours per night are more likely to develop dementia later in life.
The good news is that almost all of these risk factors are either preventable or treatable. Here are science-backed strategies to address the 11 major risk factors for memory loss.
Exercise for 30 minutes a day, eat foods that boost blood flow (such as beets and cayenne pepper), and take nutritional supplements such as ginkgo biloba.
Managing high blood pressure through these lifestyle changes can also significantly improve blood flow.
Make new learning part of your everyday life no matter how old you are.
Eat an anti-inflammatory diet, increase your intake of dietary omega-3 fatty acids with fatty fish (such as salmon or anchovies), and take supplements (such as fish oil, probiotics, and curcumins).
Additionally, following a Mediterranean diet, which includes a variety of fruits, vegetables, legumes, whole grains, and fish, while using olive oil as the primary fat, can provide significant anti-inflammatory benefits.
If you have a family history of dementia, it is critical to be serious about brain health as soon as possible. Get screened early for memory problems.
Clinical trials are underway to understand potential preventive measures and treatments, such as gene silencing, in people who have a genetic vulnerability for dementia.
Heal the brain from past head injuries with hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT) and protect your head from future injuries. Wear a helmet when biking or skiing, refrain from contact sports, wear your seat belt, avoid climbing ladders, hold handrails when going down the stairs, and never text while walking or driving.
Avoid toxic exposure and support the four organs of detoxification:
Adopt brain-healthy habits, including daily physical activity and good nutrition. In addition, learn to eliminate your automatic negative thoughts (ANTs) and seek professional help to treat any mental health issues.
Embracing healthy lifestyle choices can further support brain health and reduce the risk of diseases like Alzheimer’s.
Boost your vitamin D intake and eat onions, mushrooms, and garlic. If you suspect a lingering infection, such as long COVID or Lyme disease, work with an integrative or functional medicine doctor who can properly diagnose and treat you.
Have your healthcare provider test your hormone levels and optimize them if necessary.
Eat a brain-healthy diet, eliminate sugar, and be calorie smart. Lifestyle factors such as maintaining a balanced diet and regular exercise play a crucial role in managing diabesity.
Aim for 7-8 hours of sleep per night and develop a nightly routine that promotes relaxation. Consider supplements, such as GABA, 5-HTP, melatonin, and l-theanine. If you snore, get an evaluation for sleep apnea and treat it if necessary.
Livingston, Gill et al. Dementia prevention, intervention, and care: 2024 report of the Lancet standing Commission. The Lancet, 2024, Volume 404, Issue 10452, 572 – 628. https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(24)01296-0/abstract
Amen DG and Rodman Shankle W. Preventing Alzheimer’s: Ways to Help Prevent, Delay, Detect, and Even Halt Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Forms of Memory Loss. Putnam Adult, 2004.
Amen DG. Memory Rescue: Supercharge Your Brain, Reverse Memory Loss, and Remember What Matters Most. Tyndale, 2017.
Ferrari C, Nacmias B, Bagnoli S, Piaceri I, Lombardi G, Pradella S, Tedde A, Sorbi S. Imaging and cognitive reserve studies predict dementia in presymptomatic Alzheimer’s disease subjects. Neurodegener Dis. 2014;13(2-3):157-9. doi: 10.1159/000353690. Epub 2013 Aug 7. PMID: 23942061.
Xu, W L et al. “Midlife overweight and obesity increase late-life dementia risk: a population-based twin study.” Neurology vol. 76,18 (2011): 1568-74. doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182190d09
Sabia, Séverine et al. “Association of sleep duration in middle and old age with incidence of dementia.” Nature communications vol. 12,1 2289. 20 Apr. 2021, doi:10.1038/s41467-021-22354-2
Genomics Education Programme. Clinical trials show promise for first ‘gene silencing’ treatment for Alzheimer’s disease. Jan. 26, 2024. https://www.genomicseducation.hee.nhs.uk/blog/clinical-trials-show-promise-for-first-gene-silencing-treatment-for-alzheimers-disease/

Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
Affecting an estimated 21 million U.S. adults each year, depression is becoming a national crisis. Finding the right treatment can be challenging. Just look at the statistics showing that about 30% of people with the mental health condition have what’s called treatment-resistant depression, meaning they haven’t gotten better after trying at least two antidepressants.
With the rise in treatment-resistant depression, it’s no wonder scientists are searching for more effective ways to treat the mental disorder. In recent years, psychedelics have been making waves as potential therapies for a range of mental health disorders.
The hallucinogen ketamine made headline news in 2019 when it earned FDA approval as a new drug therapy for major depressive disorder. Another hallucinogen, psilocybin (the psychoactive compound in magic mushrooms), has also been gaining favor as a new approach for treatment-resistant depression and other mental health conditions.
But is taking a psychedelic trip on magic mushrooms safe for people looking for mental health treatment?
Psilocybin is a natural hallucinogen that distorts perception and can cause profound visual and auditory hallucinations. People can have very different experiences form ingesting magic mushrooms.
Psychedelic effects can include:
Not everybody has such a magical experience. Some people have decidedly unpleasant reactions to the substance, including:
These positive or negative effects emerge about a half hour after ingesting the substance and can last approximately four to six hours.
People have been using psychoactive mushrooms for medicinal and religious purposes for thousands of years. In the 1950s, Swiss chemist Albert Hofmann, the man who gained notoriety for discovering LSD, synthesized the substance. This opened the door to clinical research using the drug as a potential therapy for a variety of mental health issues.
In 1970, the U.S. designated it as a Schedule I drug of the Controlled Substances Act, effectively criminalizing it and indicating that it has a high risk of abuse. This put an end to most clinical research until it resurfaced more recently.
The Food and Drug Administration has since given psilocybin a breakthrough therapy designation for both treatment-resistant depression (2018) and major depressive disorder (2019), meaning it has been fast-tracked for review as a potential medication.
A small but growing body of research suggests psilocybin may be helpful for mental health conditions, such as:
For example, a 2024 study compared the effects of psilocybin therapy versus escitalopram (Lexapro) on people with moderate to severe depression. For this trial, the psilocybin group received two 25mg doses of the psychedelic drug along with psychological support. The other group took the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) escitalopram for six weeks while also receiving psychological support.
After six months of treatment, both groups showed improvements in the severity of their depression symptoms. However, the psilocybin depression treatment group experienced greater sustained improvements in psychological connectedness, functioning, and sense of meaning in life.
However, it’s critical to note that the body of scientific literature about psilocybin as a mental health treatment remains very small—involving only about 600 patients total as of 2024.
Scientists have long believed that psilocybin works by binding to serotonin receptors in the brain. This prevents the reuptake of serotonin, a neurotransmitter that’s involved with mood control, shifting attention, and cognitive flexibility. Antidepressant medications known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) work in the same way to enhance serotonin.
A 2012 brain imaging study found that psilocybin also decreases activity in certain brain regions, including the thalamus, which is involved in the transfer of information.
“‘Knocking out’ these key hubs with psilocybin appears to allow information to travel more freely in the brain, probably explaining why people’s imaginations become more vivid and animated and the world is experienced as unusual,” study author Robin Carhart-Harris told LiveScience.
Newer brain-imaging research published Nature in 2024 indicates that the drug desynchronizes the brain. Typical pathways disconnect then reconnect to other pathways in the brain. The brain scans in this study show how the brain becomes more malleable while using the psychedelic, making it possible for people to overcome maladaptive thinking and behavioral patterns.
It’s important to understand that treatment with psilocybin typically takes place in a medical setting with the guidance of a trained mental health professional. A psychiatrist or psychotherapist helps lead patients through the experience and helps integrate insights for the psychedelic trip.
Self-medication with the drug is never recommended. However, the media attention on psilocybin may be contributing to an increase in recreational usage of magic mushrooms.
Statistics show that from 2017 to 2022, law enforcement seizures of magic mushrooms more than tripled. And from 2018 to 2022, the National Poison Data System reported a three-fold increase in calls to U.S. poison control centers involving psilocybin use by adolescents and young adults.
The hype surrounding magic mushrooms as a mental health treatment may have outpaced the scientific evidence. In spite of the promising findings, a 2018 review concludes that our understanding of psilocybin’s effects is still in its infancy and suggests caution.
“Progress needs to be made in explicitly understanding the cognitive and neural mechanistic process by which psilocybin works,” the authors say.
In addition, scientists have yet to determine if the use of psilocybin could have detrimental effects in the long run.
On the Change Your Brain Every Day podcast, psychiatrist and brain health expert Dr. Daniel Amen and his wife, bestselling author Tana Amen, discuss the risks associated with psilocybin. After 40-plus years in the field, Dr. Amen says he has seen this happen before in psychiatry where a new drug hits the scene with great promise only to have major consequences emerge later.
“When I was a resident at Walter Reed in 1987 when Xanax came on the market, everybody was so excited about ‘mommy’s little helper,’—another benzo but non-addictive,” he says. “That was a lie. It increases the risk for addiction and dementia.”
Brain SPECT imaging studies at Amen Clinics have shown that some anti-anxiety drugs, such as benzodiazepines, have negative impacts on blood flow and activity in the brain. “They’re harmful to the brain,” says Dr. Amen.
He thinks it could be the same with psychedelics. “I feel like the street drugs of the ’60s—marijuana, ketamine, and magic mushrooms—are the big innovations in psychiatry as opposed to get your brain healthy and your mind will follow,” says Dr. Amen on the podcast.
Like many others in the scientific community, Dr. Amen cautions that more research on psilocybin is needed to know the lasting impacts on the brain and to establish whether it is safe on a long-term basis. In the meantime, enhancing brain health can be a powerful step in the healing process.
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
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Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
When seeking out mental health support, the goal is to find a trusted therapeutic relationship with a mental health professional who can guide your next steps in personal growth.
Some people make great progress in a one-on-one setting with a therapist but want even more support outside of those sessions. For others, it can be a solitary experience that may feel isolating at times. In either case, group coaching can help.
With the benefits of group coaching for mental health, you can learn to bridge the gap between traditional therapy and self-guided improvement through shared experiences. Let’s explore the benefits of coaching for mental health growth and the advantages of collaborative mental health improvement for you, your loved ones, or your patients.
When seeking group-based solutions for mental health, you might wonder: group therapy vs. group coaching—which one is right for me? Both can be effective, but they serve different purposes. Here’s a quick breakdown:
Research highlights the power of group coaching in promoting mental wellness through group support. According to a 2024 study in BMC Health Services Research, group health and wellness coaching validates individual health goals while fostering collaboration. This makes it an ideal choice for those looking to grow in a structured yet supportive environment.
Now that you get the gist of these two types of therapy, here are a few different but complementary ways group coaching can support your mental health and life goals.
Setting and achieving goals is at the heart of coaching for mental health growth. With group coaching, you get the benefit of shared accountability, encouragement, and inspiration that can help you when times get tough.
This type of group dynamic fosters a sense of accomplishment as you celebrate different stages of your progress with others who are facing some of the same challenges you are.
A report in Mayo Clinic Proceedings found that wellness coaching enhances quality of life and positively changes mental health results. This improvement comes from not only setting realistic goals but also learning from the experiences of other people in a group.
Your personal development in group settings bolsters your ability to work towards managing anxiety, depression, and other issues while adopting healthier coping mechanisms for longer-term benefits. The group’s encouragement amplifies the motivation you need to stick to your goals.
A cornerstone of group coaching is the accessibility of peer support in mental wellness spaces. Connecting with others who face similar challenges fosters empathy and understanding. Research has shown that when people feel heard and validated, their emotional resilience strengthens.
A systematic review on eHealth group interventions highlights the effectiveness of peer-driven support for improving mental and behavioral health.
Group coaching leverages this by creating a safe, non-judgmental environment where people can share their triumphs and shortcomings while encouraging each other to grow.
In these settings, emotional growth isn’t just personal—it’s collective. Shared stories and strategies on how to overcome struggles often spark breakthroughs, offering solutions to you that you may not have discovered alone otherwise.
Mental health and physical health are deeply connected. That’s why it’s common that when one falters, the other often follows.
This is especially true when you’re managing chronic conditions like diabetes or hypertension while also facing increased stress, anxiety, or depression. Group coaching for mental health growth addresses these intertwined challenges.
Research shows that group health coaching for people with chronic conditions leads to better health outcomes. Other benefits include reduced stress and improved emotional well-being, which are particularly significant as chronic illnesses can often amplify feelings of isolation or helplessness.
Through collaborative mental health improvement, group coaching helps participants set realistic health goals while learning strategies to manage both their physical and mental health more effectively.
Changing behavioral patterns may be one of the toughest things you can do in your therapy journey. Fortunately, that pivot can become much easier to achieve in a supportive group setting. Group coaching for mental health offers tools to replace unhelpful habits with healthier alternatives like:
A 2020 report in Systematic Reviews found that group intervention programs effectively support mental and behavioral health improvements. Participants in the study reported feeling more motivated and less alone in tackling behavioral challenges.
This is where the benefits of group coaching shine as members inspire each other to stay consistent, share strategies, and celebrate incremental victories. Over time, these small wins can lead to profound transformations that enhance emotional health and physical well-being.
Chronic pain doesn’t just affect the body—it takes a toll on mental health. Stress and anxiety exacerbate pain, creating a vicious cycle. Fortunately, addressing the psychological aspects of pain management is how group coaching boosts mental health.
A Plos One study evaluated the impact of health and wellness coaching on chronic pain sufferers. It found that participants developed better coping mechanisms and enhanced psychological resilience, leading to improved mental health.
Group coaching’s supportive environment can help you reframe your relationship to be more open to holistic ways of managing pain and reduce its impact on your daily lives. By focusing on your emotional growth through group coaching, you may find hope and healing in the support of those who can understand your struggles.
Recognizing the profound benefits of group coaching, Amen Clinics is introducing Groups at Amen Clinics, a dynamic online coaching program. Designed to provide mental wellness through group support, these 12-week courses are led by live coaches who guide participants through structured sessions.
These online group sessions are based on the groundbreaking brain-based methods of psychiatrist and bestselling author Dr. Daniel Amen, the founder of Amen Clinics.
The first course, Overcoming Anxiety and Depression, focuses on coaching for mental health growth. Essentially, you’ll learn practical strategies to manage stress responses to trauma, boost stress resilience, and build a more positive outlook on your life.
Small group sizes keep those meaningful connections and tailored support personal to your goals. If you’re ready for it, it may be an ideal option to embrace authentically collaborative mental health improvements.
Whether you’re seeking emotional growth, peer support, or practical tools to improve your mental health, group coaching for mental health offers a powerful solution. Backed by research and enriched through shared experiences, this approach empowers participants to achieve your goals as you foster community.
If you’re ready to take the next step, consider joining a group coaching program like Groups at Amen Clinics. You can unlock the potential for lasting change—and you may be surprised at what can happen when change utilizes the power of group effort.
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
Brown V, Morgan T, Fralick A. Isolation and mental health: thinking outside the box. Gen Psychiatr. 2021 May 24;34(3):e100461. doi: 10.1136/gpsych-2020-100461. PMID: 34131627; PMCID: PMC8149428
Wolever, R., Cline , T., Weiss , J. et al. Group Health & Wellness Coaching: development and validation of the required competencies. BMC Health Serv Res 24, 392 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12913-024-10704-x
Clark, M. M., Warren, B. A., Hagen, P. T., Johnson, B. D., Jenkins, S. M., Werneburg, B. L., & Olsen, K. D. (2014). The effectiveness of wellness coaching for improving quality of life. Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 89 (11), 1537–1544. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mayocp.2014.04.028
Currie, C.L., Larouche, R., Voss, M.L. et al. The impact of eHealth group interventions on the mental, behavioral, and physical health of adults: a systematic review protocol. Syst Rev 9, 217 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13643-020-01479-3
Boehmer, K.R., Barakat, S., Ahn, S. et al. Health coaching interventions for persons with chronic conditions: a systematic review and meta-analysis protocol. Syst Rev 5, 146 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13643-016-0316-3
Rethorn ZD, Pettitt RW, Dykstra E, Pettitt CD (2020) Health and wellness coaching positively impacts individuals with chronic pain and pain-related interference. PLoS ONE 15(7): e0236734. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236734

Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.
Feeling blue? Can’t seem to find the energy to get off the couch? Have trouble focusing on anything? You may assume it’s depression. And if you talk about your concerns with your healthcare provider, you could very likely walk away with a prescription for antidepressants.
But what if it isn’t really clinical depression? What if your symptoms are due to something else—something that antidepressants won’t help? For example, did you know that hormonal imbalances can lead to many symptoms of depression, often referred to as hormonal depression?
Hormones are chemical messengers that can have a powerful influence on the brain and your mental well-being. When hormone levels are balanced, you tend to have stable moods and feel energetic, motivated, and mentally sharp. When hormone levels are out of whack, however, you may experience symptoms that are associated with psychiatric illnesses, such as depression.
Hormonal imbalance symptoms can include:
Mood symptoms, such as those seen in premenstrual syndrome (PMS) and premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD), can be significant enough to disrupt daily life, illustrating the complex relationship between estrogen and mood regulation.
Hormonal imbalances occur when there is an excess or deficiency of hormones in the body. These chemical messengers, produced by glands in the endocrine system, regulate various bodily functions such as growth, metabolism, and reproductive processes.
When hormone levels are not in harmony, it can lead to a range of health issues, including mental health problems. Hormonal imbalances can significantly contribute to the development of anxiety and depression disorders, affecting your overall well-being and quality of life.
Of the hundreds of hormones our bodies produce, here are four that are known to lead to symptoms of depressive disorders when they are out of balance:
Problems occur when thyroid dysfunction causes the gland to produce too little hormone (hypothyroidism) or too much hormone (hyperthyroidism).
Thyroid disorders can significantly impact mental health, particularly anxiety and depression. In fact, thyroid dysfunction is directly linked to one-third of all depressions.
The menstrual cycle is a complex process involving the interplay of various hormones, including estrogen and progesterone. These hormones can have a profound effect on mood, emotional well-being, and mental health.
Fluctuations in hormone levels during the menstrual cycle can lead to symptoms of anxiety and depression, particularly in women who experience premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD).
Understanding the connection between your menstrual cycle and mental health can help you better manage these symptoms and seek appropriate treatment.
Premenstrual dysphoric disorder (PMDD) is a severe form of premenstrual syndrome (PMS) that affects 3-9% of women.
Unlike PMS, which may cause mild discomfort, PMDD is characterized by intense symptoms of depression, anxiety, and irritability that occur during the premenstrual phase of the menstrual cycle. These symptoms can be severe enough to disrupt daily life and relationships.
Hormonal fluctuations, particularly the drop in estrogen levels, are thought to contribute to the development of PMDD, making it crucial to recognize and address this condition.
Thyroid problems, such as hypothyroidism and hyperthyroidism, can significantly contribute to the development of depression. The thyroid gland, a small but mighty organ located in the neck, produces hormones that regulate metabolism, energy levels, and mood.
When the thyroid gland is underactive (hypothyroidism), it can lead to symptoms of depression, fatigue, and anxiety. Conversely, an overactive thyroid gland (hyperthyroidism) can cause symptoms of anxiety, irritability, and mood swings.
Understanding the role of the thyroid gland in mood regulation is essential for identifying and treating thyroid-related depressive symptoms.
Adrenal hormones, such as cortisol, play a crucial role in the body’s response to stress. The adrenal glands produce cortisol in response to stress, helping you cope with challenging situations.
However, chronically elevated cortisol levels can contribute to the development of depression, anxiety, and mood disorders. When stress is unrelenting, the constant flood of cortisol can disrupt the body’s natural hormonal balance, leading to symptoms of depression and anxiety.
Managing stress and maintaining a healthy hormonal balance is key to preventing mood disorders related to adrenal hormone dysfunction.
Many things can interfere with healthy hormone production, including:
When hormonal imbalances are behind your feelings of sadness and loss of energy, antidepressants won’t get your mind right. But if no one ever tests your hormone levels, you will never know that hormonal dysfunction could be contributing to your depressive symptoms.
This could leave you going from one antidepressant medication to another in search of relief without success. In some cases, intermittent antidepressant treatment may be necessary to manage mood disorders related to hormonal changes.
It’s also important to investigate whether a past head injury may be contributing to hormonal dysfunction.
Brain imaging studies can reveal signs of a TBI that could be the root cause of the hormonal problems that are contributing to your symptoms. In this case, healing your brain is the key to achieving healthier hormone levels.
Hormonal changes during different life stages, such as perimenopausal depression, can also significantly impact mood and anxiety disorders.
This is why it is so important to make sure you visit a healthcare professional who will check your hormones and scan your brain as part of a comprehensive evaluation. When you get your hormones right, it may improve symptoms of depression by stabilizing your moods, boosting your energy, and clearing away the brain fog.
Reviewed by Amen Clinics Inc. Clinicians
Haggerty JJ Jr, Evans DL, Prange AJ Jr. Organic brain syndrome associated with marginal hypothyroidism. Am J Psychiatry. 1986 Jun;143(6):785-6. Doi: 10.1176/ajp.143.6.785. PMID: 3717406.
Getahun, Darios et al. Trends in Postpartum Depression by Race/Ethnicity and Pre-pregnancy Body Mass Index. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Volume 228, Issue 1, Supplement S122-S123 (2023). https://www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378%2822%2901132-2/fulltext
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Learn how traumatic brain injury can occur after minor car accidents, even without hitting your head, and what science says about healing.

Behavioral Health vs. Mental Health explained. Learn differences in symptoms, brain causes, diagnosis, and why it matters for treatment.