Visionaries: Elissa Epel on why toxic stress is public health enemy #1

Elissa Epel

TEDMED 2011 speaker Elissa Epel, a UCSF psychologist, has studied the health impacts of stress, from its effects on our DNA to its relationship to overeating, for two decades.

Q Some of your research has centered on the way that stress hormones contribute to increasing our drive to eat, particularly high-carbohydrate and high-fat “comfort foods.” To what degree is stress contributing to our national obesity crisis, in your opinion?

EE We can’t quantify exactly how big of a role stress plays. It could be huge. It’s invisible and it’s easy to ignore; it’s pervasive. Most of us have gotten so used to living in a matrix of stress – time pressure, demands, rushed social interactions, rushed eating – that we don’t even notice it. So we might not realize how stressed our body really is. But the effects of stress can still stimulate our appetite, and shift us to choosing more ‘white food’ – what we call “comfort food,” – high-calorie, high-fat food. This promotes metabolic disease because it causes us to store calories in the visceral area and liver. And that stored fat is at the core of many chronic diseases, not just diabetes.

Q I was surprised to see your study showing educational attainment is also related to telomere length. What might the mechanisms for that be?

EE That relationship is multi-layered and needs to be unpacked. One common theme in trying to understand health disparities is testing whether part of it stems from  greater stress exposure or reactivity over a lifetime. For example, the effects of more years of education early in life can be seen decades later, in longer telomere length. Higher education, or maybe it’s the quality of education, can create an infrastructure in the brain for more adaptive coping – it can help with strengthening what we call ‘executive function’ –which helps us think clearly under stress.

Conversely, there are many active ingredients in the milieu of low socioeconomic status that cause wear and tear. Interestingly, though, perception can play a large role here. We have measured this by giving people a picture of a ladder and asking them to place themselves on a rung (the bottom rung being the lowest status).  Rating oneself as low, regardless of actual income or education, relates to poor adaptation to stress.  Specifically, when given the same task to do in the lab, people low on the ladder reacted hotly each time, as if it were new, instead of habituating to it. There is also the built environment of low socioeconomic status, which doesn’t leave opportunities for buying healthy food and places for exercise or safe walking. And the built environment can feed back and affect how people feel.  For example, fewer parks or more liquor stores predict a decreased feeling of neighborhood trust and cooperation.

Q There seems to be a big disconnect between what people know is good for their health, and their actual behaviors. Is mindfulness – focusing on what we’re doing right now, in the present moment – the missing link, do you think?

EE I think that’s right on. We can’t possibly regulate our behavior and feelings, and suppress those pesky but strong impulses and other distractors, if we are not paying attention. In a high-stress environment, our brain activity shifts toward the limbic system and the emotional stress response, and away from the parts of the pre-frontal cortex that house executive control systems, the rational and analytical drivers of our behavior. So we react automatically and impulsively when we are under stress and not paying full attention.

Watch: The Mindful Human Genome

And even if we are focusing a lot of effort on eating better or exercising, but in a really self-critical way, this can sabotage our efforts as well. Very few people meet their exercise, sleep, and nutrition goals each day. So mindful attention includes both an intention and a kind attitude, and these help clear our mind of unhelpful or intrusive thoughts, and improve our ability to carry out our intentions.

Eating is an interesting example of a behavior that is not under our full conscious control, although we have not admitted that yet. Eating is something that we can do without paying attention. Otherwise, if it took focus and effort, that wouldn’t be part of adaptive evolution. Overeating is related to stress but also altered neurobiology of the reward system, the source of our strongest motivational drives. This reward area responds to palatable food. This can drive compulsive behavior that feels out of control, an experience similar to being a drug addict for some people. We have to better understand how powerful certain types of foods can be, and that certain conditions, including stress, make people especially susceptible.

In some of our studies, we are trying to help low-income people who feel very little control over their life, with their weight. We are teaching mindfulness to pregnant women, and it looks like the training might be helping not only them but also their babies. We have to think of ‘stress reduction’ where it matters most – which includes the womb. Prenatal stress exposure can affect a child’s health for a long time, possibly a lifetime. For example, mothers who have experienced major stresses while pregnant have offspring with shorter telomeres.

Dr. Elissa Epel : The Science of Stress

Q One of many intriguing facts you mentioned in your TEDMED 2011 talk was that technology can actually increase stress in various ways. At the same time, we’re seeing a slew of new apps aimed at helping us to calm down.

EE I think mobile apps for stress reduction are a fabulous potential use of technology, if they really work. For example, we could be using our mobile phones to remind us to rejoin with the moment, and to breathe fully, to notice our physical body and become embodied again. We live mired in our thoughts, above the neck, and this is made worse by multitasking.

But technology devices can become part of multitasking, thus adding to the strain on our limited attention, splitting it yet one more way. There are a lot of wellness apps out there, but I also think that we need data. Almost none of them are evaluated so although they seem promising, do people really benefit from them in a way that would lead to meaningful change? This is a powerful way to reach people, and I admit that even I am involved in an effort to test a stress reduction app!

There are so many answerable questions: Can we take people deeper into a meaningful life, or do these technology interventions contribute to fractured attention and more shallow social interactions? Do people stick with them? Do the apps make a dent in chronic stress arousal over time? As a society we desperately need stress reduction. Let’s hope we can use technology to get there.

Q If you had the power to enforce one public health measure based on your research, what would it be?

EE Public policy makers try to use their resources well to help people, but don’t always think about how to make policy motivating to an individual, nor take into account fundamental causes of societal and individual stress. Stress is caused by a perception of lack of control and unpredictability. Policymakers can promote empowerment, helping disadvantaged people gain a sense of control over their daily life.  Social scientists understand which social and structural factors need to change to help individuals change.

A main message of research today, from epigenetics in basic models to epidemiology, is that adult health is shaped early in life, in important ways we can no longer ignore. So resources are best spent early in life, with the goal of promoting good health and habits, and preventing disease. Good quality education is critical, particularly for girls. It directly translates to better health behaviors and eventually health for the next generation. Resources are just much less effective when applied to diseases that are incurable and costly to manage. Our money is spent in an unbalanced and illogical way. We skimp on education — particularly in California — and spend a tremendous amount of money and time trying to cure incurable diseases such as obesity. Instead, we spend big money on bariatric surgery and costly band-aid procedures.

Q Has your research changed any of your own personal or work habits?

EE It has, but only in an incremental way over many years. I have been studying the field of stress for almost 20 years, so I know all too well what we should be doing, and how my behaviors such as curtailing sleep and having too many demands placed on me affects my daily physiology, and cellular stress. Does that mean I get enough sleep, exercise, meditate every day, keep work manageable, and prioritize the things that are most meaningful, versus the most urgent? No. I am closer to that than I used to be, and maybe in another stage of life… I still experience plenty of challenging situations, and have my reactions, but now in a more mindful way, and that is a qualitatively different experience. Like most people, I am a work in progress.

–Interview by Stacy Lu

 

What’s really causing our obesity epidemic?

What are the top 10 contributing factors to our nation’s struggle with obesity?

TEDMED’s Great ChallengesTeam Leaders, who address the problem every day from their top posts in advocacy, academia and public health, had varied perspectives on what’s causing this vast, relatively recent, and growing health threat.

A big part of the issue is that we oversimplify the problem, says Joe Nadglowski,  President of the Obesity Action Coalition. Gaining or losing weight is not just a matter of calories in, calories out, he says, but a matter of what does get consumed, and when.

Professor Christine Ferguson of the School of Public Health and Health Services at George Washington University, pointed out that interventions for children’s health may be the most effective way to stem the tide of obesity, and that working at less than peak health impacts our workforce and hence, our economy.

Dan Callahan of the Hastings Center pointed out industry influence as a factor, including resistance to resistance to regulation and taxation of unhealthy food and beverages, and large restaurant and sugared beverage portions.

Maya Rockeymoore, President and CEO of Global Policy Solutions, singled out portion sizes and the easy access to high-fat and sugary foods as causes, while adding that for many neighborhoods, access to healthy food was also a major barrier.

And Rebecca Puhl, Director of Research and Weight Stigma Initiatives at the Rudd Center for Food Policy & Obesity at Yale University, added agricultural policy, commodities pricing and the built environment to her broad-view perspective on the issues.

Click here see their full responses and comments from the rest of the team members on the Great Challenge of obesity.

Great Challenges: Conversations Continue

The top 20 Great Challenges were announced yesterday. Perhaps one of the most exciting things to come out of the Great Challenges program, sponsored by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, was the amazing conversations that these topics catalyzed. Below are highlights from conversations with advocates for some of the top 20 Challenges.

Suzanne Geffen Mintz, National Family Caregivers Association, and Lincoln Smith, President and CEO of Altarum Institute

“Patients themselves might not have the capacity to engage in their own care,” said Lincoln Smith, President of the Altarum Institute. “It’s draining.” Challenge #34, The Caregiver Crisis, came out second in the list of top 20 Great Challenges. The bad news is that health outcomes may be worse for caregivers because of the time, financial and stress burdens they face. Suzanne Geffen Mintz, National Family Caregivers Association Co-founder and advocate for Challenge #34, said what she wants most as a caregiver herself is for someone to, “document what we do. We’re like illegal aliens. We need to be in medical records — both in the patient’s records and in our own.”

This would help identify who needs support and resources, and help to connect them with what they need. Businesses lose billions of dollars in productivity due to caregiver struggles, said Geffen Mintz, and that’s because, “It impacts every sector of society and no family is immune.”

Christine Ferguson, Challenge Advocate, with newfound TEDMED friends Marty Kearns and Patrick McCrummen

Challenge #2 brings attention to another pervasive problem at crisis levels, Coming to Terms with the Obesity Crisis. “It’s interesting,” said Christine Ferguson, JD, Director of the STOP Obesity Alliance and Challenge #2 advocate, “when we have cancer affecting around 8% of the population, diabetes around 10% and obesity 35% — what has preventing us from addressing it?” Barriers include the perception that the problem is too complicated, or that it’s just a matter of willpower, she said. The “pull yourself up by the bootstraps” mentality that used to exist for mental health issues too, needs to go away before we can truly make progress, said Ferguson. She quoted some startling statistics — over 70% of obese people know all of the relevant health messages such as portion size, and have tried to change at least once; while 70% of primary care providers say no one in their office had any training on helping overweight and obese people get healthier. People are motivated and trying, but they don’t have the resources or support for change.

Marty Kearns, Project Director of PreventObesity.net, a project of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, said his organization is working to change policies and environments to help children and families eat well and move more, and by fostering, engaging and connecting a base of advocates who are willing to take action. Partick McCrummen, Senior Director for Corporate Contributions at Johnson & Johnson, also talked about the value of collaboration, and said J&J is hoping to serve as a convener for thought leaders and global organizations.

As we’re working so hard to improve the health of the world, what’s the one thing we’re all forgetting? “It’s the secret health crisis that’s right in front of our face,” said Russell Sanna, PhD, Executive Director of Harvard Medical School Division of Sleep Medicine and advocate for surprise add, Challenge #51. The big culprit? Sleep. We all know we need it, and none of us get enough. Why not? “There is an uncoordinated conspiracy against sleep health,” said Sanna. Feeding the conspiracy are Facebook, mobile phones, entertainment, an over-achieving society and pervasive sleep illiteracy. Embarrassingly, Sanna quickly uncovered this reporter’s own sleep illiteracy — sleep bulimia (“I’ll catch up on sleep this weekend”) doesn’t work? The color blue triggers your circadian rhythm (think Facebook), keeping you up when you should be winding down?

“There’s hope,” said Sanna. NBA stars are now hiring sleep consultants to ensure better performance despite hectic schedules (sound familiar?). Sanna hopes this is the start of a massive culture shift that will no longer encourage or allow bad sleep habits. Possible solutions: encourage employers to trigger a “go-dark” period on company Blackberries, and Facebook to turn its blue background grey at a user-specified hour as a reminder to shut down and get some sleep.

But every solution won’t necessarily work for every person. “Each individual has different health risks,” said Rebecca Sutphen, President and Chief Medical Officer of InformedDNA and advocate for Challenge #4, Shaping the Future of Personalized Medicine. “The genome is the key to paying attention to the right things,” said Sutphen, who urged us as a society to move medicine forward by unlocking the solutions that lie within our own bodies.

We spoke with many more advocates and overheard some fascinating conversations. Stay tuned for more on the 20 Great Challenges throughout the year.

What are the Great Challenges of health and medicine?

TEDMED will officially launch The Great Challenges Program during our April 10-13 gathering at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C.

The Great Challenges of health and medicine are complex, persistent problems that have medical and non-medical causes, impact millions of lives, and affect the well-being of all of America. In April, the TEDMED community will discuss 50 proposed Challenges and vote to determine which 20 Challenges will be TEDMED’s focus for the coming year.

We’ll then have a year-long series of interactive webinars with our Great Challenges team leaders, exerts and visionaries with varied viewpoints on the issues. Our community will then engage in a year-long series of lively national discussions designed to generate broad, multi-disciplinary understanding of each Challenge that can set the stage for truly effective action.

We hope your vote will be included in those cast by thousands of people around the country — at TEDMED 2012, TEDMEDLive locations, and online at www.TEDMED.com — to weigh in on the nation’s greatest challenges to health and medicine. Votes will be collected and counted during the conference dates, April 10-13, 2012. We’ll be in touch with details. In the meantime, click here to learn more about the Great Challenges Program and the proposed 50 Challenges.