In a pre-pandemic world, people looked at the New Year as an opportunity for positive change, growth and a clean slate. However, as we approach the end of this year I’m seeing many of my friends and patients entering the New Year with high levels of stress and anxiety.
On the surface, the source of this anxiety is clear: we’re facing another round of news headlines warning of new Covid-19 strains like Omicron, we’re struggling with ambiguous timelines around returning to the workplace, and many of us feel like we have no ability to plan for the future any more. And our symptoms – brain fog, exhaustion, lack of sleep and overall burnout – seem pretty clear too.
But the true root cause of the mental unease and recurring anxiety so many of us are suffering from may not be in our heads.
As a doctor, and as a healthcare CEO overseeing the care of tens of thousands of patients through my practice Parsley Health, I have repeatedly observed how physical conditions in the body masquerade as anxiety, depression and even burnout.
In many cases, physical culprits – ranging from blood sugar disorders and nutrient deficiencies to thyroid imbalances and food allergies– are actually sabotaging a person’s best efforts to find mental and emotional wellbeing. More and more of these physical problems are going undiagnosed or unrecognized today – 26 percent of Americans don’t have a primary care doctor with that number declining per decade, which means that they are not proactively looking at their health beyond the surface. The result is that many people are suffering and feel like they’re hitting a wall with their mental health, as the common mental health solutions fail to address the root cause of their concerns.
Two long years of this pandemic have left many of us working from home, staring at screens for hours, managing daily cortisol spikes from doom scrolling and eating or drinking in ways that fuel the physical conditions that harm our mental wellbeing. Across my practice I’ve seen not just a rise in anxiety – which, according to one study, is up 26 percent globally since the start of the pandemic – but also a rise in the physical conditions that disguise themselves with symptoms like anxiety and burnout.
So what do you do about it? There are five simple steps you can take to address the physical roadblocks that may be preventing you from achieving peak mental health.
Get tested
Too many chronic conditions hide in plain sight. According to the CDC, six in 10 Americans suffer from a chronic condition, and tens of millions more have one they don’t know about yet. Medicine needs to be proactive to work, and even your doctor may not be connecting the dots between your mental and physical health. Talk to your doctor about testing you for common chronic conditions that could be fueling your anxiety. Specifically you’ll want them to test for:
Thyroid hormones – make sure they’re not too low or too high
Blood sugar and insulin – ensure you’re not on a blood sugar roller coaster ride daily
Markers of inflammation and autoimmune disease – anxiety, depression and burnout can be key symptoms of inflammation or undiagnosed autoimmune conditions
Level of key nutrients like B12, folate and Vitamin D3 – when these are low your mood can suffer
Gut health and microbiome analyses – most of your neurotransmitters are produced in the gut, so if you’re having digestive troubles this can severely impact mood
Food allergies like wheat and dairy can throw your gut health into a spin
Stress hormones like cortisol influence whether you’re in fight or flight mode








