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For National Stress Awareness Month, Jillian Goldstein, LCSW, director of the Counseling and Wellness Center at Gladstone Institutes, describes the unique stressors that can stem from working in a lab, explains how your body might respond, and provides tips to help manage stress.
Recognized each April since 1992, National Stress Awareness Month raises attention to how stress impacts everyday wellness, and is an opportunity to build coping strategies to mitigate its effects.
Since launching Gladstone’s Counseling and Wellness Center last year, I’ve been struck by my clients’ passion, drive, and the rigor with which they approach their scientific research, and their academic and career pursuits. Biomedical research is a competitive, demanding, and high-intensity field, so not surprisingly, it’s common to experience high levels of stress, both acute and chronic. I’m confident that Gladstone’s commitment to fostering a culture that values wellness will encourage more conversation, awareness, and ease to discuss and manage the stressors that many scientists experience, given the very nature of their field of work.
Something I've learned from my clinical practice at Gladstone is that being a scientist comes with both the excitement of innovation as well as managing uncertainty and failure. Coming up with bold ideas and pioneering uncharted territories brings about risks, unknowns, and unintended outcomes. No matter your role in the lab, you'll have to confront your ability to cope with and manage the uncertainties that are inescapable in biomedical research.
The scientific community experiences a wide range of stressors, and each stage of your development as a scientist brings unique challenges—disappointment with failed experiments, working on weekends to tend to cell cultures, navigating difficult interpersonal and supervisory relationships, preparing for a qualifying exam, managing multiple projects and grant deadlines simultaneously, feeling the pressure for first authorship, and securing an academic position, to name just a few.
These external stressors may make it difficult to set boundaries at work, say no to projects, manage your workload effectively, take time off, and impact your self-confidence and motivation.
Both acute and chronic stress trigger the sympathetic branch of your body’s autonomic nervous system—the “fight-or-flight” response—releasing several hormones, such as corticotropin-releasing hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, epinephrine, norepinephrine, and cortisol. The stress response can cause symptoms such as:
When stress becomes chronic, it can have long-lasting effects on your entire body, and is associated with cardiovascular disease, diabetes, asthma, cancer and infectious disease, obesity and metabolic syndrome, chronic pain, insomnia, anxiety, depression, and substance abuse.
Jillian Goldstein, Gladstone's in-house therapist is hopeful a culture that values wellness will make conversations about stress easier.
The first step in stress reduction is being aware that you’re experiencing stress. The pace and intensity of the biomedical research field may make it difficult to slow down and notice how you’re doing. Take a moment to check in with yourself and ask:
Many well-researched techniques can reduce the effects of stress. So the second step is making time to put them into practice!
These recommendations can help you if you’re struggling with acute or chronic stress, especially if you can integrate them into your day-to-day routine:
The third step is recognizing when clinical intervention like psychotherapy or medication management might be helpful. When stress goes unmanaged, it can lead to more significant mental health concerns such as anxiety and depression.
Cognitive behavioral therapy, self-compassion, and mindfulness are approaches that I find very effective in helping clients foster positive mindset shifts and tame the negative thinking, anxiety, and depression that can arise from stress.
For Gladstone employees, sessions at the Counseling and Wellness Center and through Gladstone’s Employee Assistance Program (EAP) are free and confidential, and I’m always happy to provide consultation and referrals to external providers.
If you are not receiving benefits from Gladstone, I recommend contacting your HR department or your university's student health center (sometimes called CAPS or Counseling and Psychological Services) to learn about your mental health benefits.
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