Young and Stressed
by author Michelle Hancock
Often unnoticed and untreated, stress is a huge factor in the health of Canadian children. David P. was two weeks away from his 12th birthday when he broke out in a bad case of acne that wouldn’t go away. It didn’t help that the shy scholar had just moved to a new school in Surrey, BC. It was hard making friends and soon the insults started. “Pizza face,” “zit boy” and other names diminished his self-worth to the point where his grades began to drop from As to Bs to Cs. “I felt so bad,” he recalls. “My face was all red and ugly.”
His mother, Isabelle, didn’t know what to do. She herself was dealing with the divorce that had necessitated their move to a different community. But finally, on a friend’s advice, Isabelle took her son to a naturopathic/homeopathic practitioner, who suggested David’s underlying problem was, in effect, stress. She prescribed homeopathic remedies to work on both the physical and emotional levels.
“At first, I took them because my mother told me to,” David admits. “But then, my skin started to look better.” He tried to cut back on junk food and took a daily “green food” drink. A school liaison also recommended David and Isabelle see a counsellor to deal with any lingering issues concerning the recent move and change in family status. It took several months, but David’s skin problems cleared up and he began settling into his new routine. “I’m not sure what did it,” he says. “But I feel a lot better about everything.”
Researchers estimate that stress contributes to up to 80 percent of all major illnesses, including cancer, heart disease, hormone and metabolic dysfunction, skin disorders, numerous types of infection, as well as mental and emotional problems. An estimated 70 to 80 percent of physician visits are for stress-related issues.
A graduate of the UBC School of Journalism and former alive managing editor, Michelle Hancock remains dedicated to writing about the world of natural and integrated health. To de-stress, she plays sports and surrounds herself with books. E-mail michellehancock@shaw.ca.
Source: alive #251, September 2003

