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Winter Blues

  • Mental Health
  • Podcasts

Winter Blues

Dreary feelings can worsen into seasonal affective disorder. By coping tips from Dr. Brian P. McDonough. This audio file plays for 0 minutes and 53 seconds.

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For many, it is called the winter time blues; and for most of us it is a minor, but annoying, problem. The holidays are over, its dark and dreary early in the afternoon, and it is difficult to do any kind of outdoor activity because it's cold and windy. Need I say more?

Fortunately, most of us learn to cope by fantasizing about warmer days or, if we are lucky, getting away for a warm vacation. But there is always the option of getting out the coat and gloves and going for a brisk walk.

Unfortunately, some people have more than a minor problem this time of year. For people with seasonal effective disorder, the depression can become severe, so severe that it's crippling. Over the past few years, scientists have shown in repeated studies that this is due to a certain part of the brain that responds to light. Using banks of high intensity lights and asking patients to get a daily dose of the brightness has helped reverse symptoms. Now, if you suffer from seasonal effective disorder, or think you do, talk to your physician about it.

I'm Dr. Brian McDonough.

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More about this Topics

  • Facts About Seasonal Affective Disorder

  • Don't Worry, Breathe Happy

  • Optimism and Recuperation

  • Caring for a loved one with autism

  • Sleep Difficulties

Other Topics

    • Beyond the Baby Blues
    • Daily Relaxation Tools
    • Teens and Depression
    • Exercise and Depression
    • Recognizing an eating disorder
    • Survivor's Guilt & Making it Through the War
    • Self-Care: Remaining Resilient 2
    • Mental Health: Making a Difference Together
    • Virtual Roundtable & Running the COVID Battle: Strategies for Our Medical Heroes
    • The Mind-Body Connection (2017)
    • Being Supportive to Someone Who Has Experienced Trauma
    • Coping with Traumatic Events
    • Emotional Numbness: How to Recognize and Treat It
    • Coping with the Stress of Relocation After a Disaster (Part 1): Introduction
    • Incidents of Mass Violence