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Listen • 4:30 Feelings of exhaustion, irritability and mental fogginess are our bodies normal response to an abnormal year of pandemic life. In recent weeks, Dr. Kali Cyrus has struggled with periods of exhaustion. I am taking a nap in between patients, says Cyrus, a psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University. I m going to bed earlier. It s hard to even just get out of bed. I don t feel like being active again. Exhaustion is also one of the top complaints she hears from her patients these days. They say things like, It s just so hard to get out of bed or I ve been misplacing things more often, she says. ....
Wenjin Chen/Getty Images toggle caption Wenjin Chen/Getty Images Feelings of exhaustion, irritability and mental fogginess are our bodies normal response to an abnormal year of pandemic life. Wenjin Chen/Getty Images In recent weeks, Dr. Kali Cyrus has struggled with periods of exhaustion. I am taking a nap in between patients, says Cyrus, a psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University. I m going to bed earlier. It s hard to even just get out of bed. I don t feel like being active again. Exhaustion is also one of the top complaints she hears from her patients these days. They say things like, It s just so hard to get out of bed or I ve been misplacing things more often, she says. ....
In recent weeks, Dr. Kali Cyrus has struggled with periods of exhaustion. I am taking a nap in between patients, says Cyrus, a psychiatrist at Johns Hopkins University. I m going to bed earlier. It s hard to even just get out of bed. I don t feel like being active again. Exhaustion is also one of the top complaints she hears from her patients these days. They say things like, It s just so hard to get out of bed or I ve been misplacing things more often, she says. Some patients tell Cyrus they ve been making mistakes at work. Some tell her they can barely turn on the TV. All I want to do is stare at the ceiling. Others say they are more irritable. ....
Boston College researchers find sharp increase in anxiety, depression during pandemic By Martin Finucane Globe Staff,Updated April 24, 2021, 12:16 a.m. Email to a Friend Craig F. Walker/Globe Staff/The Boston Globe In the latest evidence that the coronavirus pandemic has harmed peopleâs mental health, Boston College researchers say reports of anxiety and depression among Americans increased in 2020 to levels more than six times higher than the year before. âThe COVID-19 pandemic has disrupted nearly all aspects of life, leading to rising mortality rates, increasing economic inequities, and gross disturbances in peopleâs daily lives and social interactions. Perhaps not surprisingly, these myriad stressors have led to rising rates of mental health disorder symptoms,â the researchers reported earlier this month in the journal Translational Behavioral Medicine. ....
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