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Body chemistry can predict severity of depression after death of spouse


Body chemistry can predict severity of depression after death of spouse
A new study from researchers at Rice University has found that bodily inflammation after the death of a spouse can predict future depression.
“Inflammation and future depressive symptoms among recently bereaved spouses” will appear in the June 2021 edition of the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology. Lead author Lydia Wu, a Rice psychology graduate student, and Christopher Fagundes, associate professor of psychology and principal investigator for the Biobehavioral Mechanisms Explaining Disparities (BMED) lab at Rice, led the study. The research team evaluated 99 people who lost their spouses within 2-3 months of the study on a number of factors, including physical and mental health, across a three-month period. ....

Daniela Taylor , Michelle Chen , Ryan Brown , Angie Leroy , Jonathan Butner , Lydia Wu , Cobi Heijnen , Diana Chirinos , Christopher Fagundes , Rice University , Biobehavioral Mechanisms Explaining Disparities , Marcel De Dios , மைக்கேல் சென் , ரியான் பழுப்பு , ஆங்கி லெராய் , லிடியா வு , கோபி ஹெய்ஜ்னென் , கிறிஸ்டோபர் பகுந்டேஸ் , அரிசி பல்கலைக்கழகம் ,

Body chemistry can predict severity of depression after death of spouse


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HOUSTON - (May 19, 2021) - A new study from researchers at Rice University has found that bodily inflammation after the death of a spouse can predict future depression.
Inflammation and future depressive symptoms among recently bereaved spouses will appear in the June 2021 edition of the journal
Psychoneuroendocrinology. Lead author Lydia Wu, a Rice psychology graduate student, and Christopher Fagundes, associate professor of psychology and principal investigator for the Biobehavioral Mechanisms Explaining Disparities (BMED) lab at Rice, led the study. The research team evaluated 99 people who lost their spouses within 2-3 months of the study on a number of factors, including physical and mental health, across a three-month period. ....

Rice University , United States , Amy Mccaig , Angie Leroy , Lydia Wu , Jeff Falk , Cobi Heijnen , Christopher Fagundes , Baker Institute For Public , Natural Sciences , Princeton Review , Biobehavioral Mechanisms Explaining Disparities , Price News , Media Relations , Continuing Studies , Social Sciences , Baker Institute , Social Behavioral Science , Death Dying , அரிசி பல்கலைக்கழகம் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஆமி ம்க்கேக் , ஆங்கி லெராய் , லிடியா வு , ஜெஃப் ஃபாக் , கோபி ஹெய்ஜ்னென் ,

Rice University: Body chemistry can predict severity of depression after death of spouse


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A new study from researchers at Rice University has found that bodily inflammation after the death of a spouse can predict future depression.
“Inflammation and future depressive symptoms among recently bereaved spouses” will appear in the June 2021 edition of the journal Psychoneuroendocrinology. Lead author Lydia Wu, a Rice psychology graduate student, and Christopher Fagundes, associate professor of psychology and principal investigator for the Biobehavioral Mechanisms Explaining Disparities (BMED) lab at Rice, led the study. The research team evaluated 99 people who lost their spouses within 2-3 months of the study on a number of factors, including physical and mental health, across a three-month period. ....

Lydia Wu , Christopher Fagundes , Rice University , Biobehavioral Mechanisms Explaining Disparities , லிடியா வு , கிறிஸ்டோபர் பகுந்டேஸ் , அரிசி பல்கலைக்கழகம் ,