Health&Wellness Magazine January 2016 | Page 12

12 & January 2016 | Read this issue and more at www.healthandwellnessmagazine.net | Like us @healthykentucky INTEGRATIVE MEDICINE Mindfulness for Anxiety & Depression By John A. Patterson MD, MSPH, FAAFP, Mind Body Studio Although anxiety and depression can be temporary experiences associated with life’s stresses and losses, they can also become major and tragic burdens for individuals, families and the overall economy. Anxiety is characterized by intrusive, worried, fearful and recurring thoughts. These thoughts may be precipitated by external events or they may be internally generated without a clear external trigger. Symptoms of anxiety include palpitations (with or without an actual increase in heart rate), elevated blood pressure, sweating, trembling, dizziness and avoidance of certain situations, events, places and people out of fear of worsening symptoms. While short-term anxiety can be a normal reaction to life stress, clinical anxiety disorders can be associated with intense, recurrent worry, fear and avoidance of everyday situations. Panic attacks are a type of anxiety that can occur suddenly, with or without any apparent cause, characterized by sudden intense fear that triggers a severe physical reaction and con