09/06/2018 / By Rhonda Johansson
Nutrition plays a direct, if not essential, role in how well we handle day-to-day situations and our risk of developing psychiatric disorders. A collection of new studies published in a special section of the November 2017 issue of the journal Clinical Psychological Science has concluded on the distinct power food has on the brain.
As explained by guest editors Julia J. Rucklidge (University of Canterbury) and Bonnie J. Kaplan (University of Calgary), the collection was made to “showcase the diversity of studies being conducted in a new, rapidly emerging field of nutrition and mental health.”
These studies add to the new school of “nutritional psychiatry” — a branch of mental health focused on preventing, managing, and perhaps even treating psychiatric illnesses through food. Scientists say that the gut microbiome profile, or the delicate balance between good and bad bacteria found within the gut, not only affects how well you feel physically, but mentally as well.
Five analyses support this, as briefly described below:
All of these studies concluded that further research is necessary to truly determine how food impacts mental health. Nevertheless, mental health experts note that these studies should encourage the public to take a closer look at what they eat and the ways they can improve their well-being by making simple dietary changes.
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Tagged Under: adhd, Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, depression, diet, food is medicine, healthy eating, inflammation, insomnia, Mediterranean diet, mental health, mind body science, multivitamins, natural remedies, nutrition, nutritional psychiatry, obsessive-compulsive disorder, OCD, vitamins and minerals
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