Drug – Centric Psychiatry is Out

Teray Garchitorena Kunishi, ND

Dr. Teray offers natural and integrative programs for healing anxiety & depression, chronic fatigue, and digestive conditions. She is a licensed naturopathic doctor, wellness coach, author, and creator of the Deeply Happy Expert Series. She serves clients globally via phone and video consultation.
Get in touch at http://www.deeplyhappy.com/contact/

Latest posts by Teray Garchitorena Kunishi, ND (see all)

Nutritional psychiatry (food as mood medicine) is rightfully taking its place in the mainstream. I have seen incredible results from using nutrition to treat anxiety, depression, and other mental illnesses. My patients know firsthand how the right nutrients can totally change someone’s mood, energy and mental clarity. We’re not the only ones. The Lancet, one of the world’s leading medical journals, recently confirmed the link between the food you eat and your mood. According to their recent article, dietary treatments have been found to be helpful in treating: Depression Psychosis Suicidal tendencies Childhood mental health issues Schizophrenia Bipolar disorder Compulsive behavior PTSD In particular, the Lancet article discusses the promising results of the Mediterranean diet, with nuts, in preventing the onset of depression. Nutritional psychiatry goes beyond the essential foundation of using food as medicine. It includes using targeted supplements to act as mood modulators by themselves, and to increase the efficacy of medication. Individualized supplementation – using vitamins, minerals, amino acids and essential fatty acids – is helpful in the following ways: Correcting deficiencies due to poor nutrition Compensating for poor absorption or genetic errors in metabolism Reducing inflammation Improving the action of neurotransmitters (serotonin, dopamine, noradrenaline) Enhancing cell-membrane function Growth and repair of nerve cells Protecting cells from damage The Lancet article identifies key nutrients that are particularly helpful in improving mood and brain function. These include: B vitamins (with active forms like methylfolate, please!) Zinc Magnesium Sam – E Vitamin D So does this mean that you should run out and buy these supplements? Maybe, maybe not. Remember, individualized medicine works better than any one-size fits...

The Most Important Food for Balancing Your Mood

Teray Garchitorena Kunishi, ND

Dr. Teray offers natural and integrative programs for healing anxiety & depression, chronic fatigue, and digestive conditions. She is a licensed naturopathic doctor, wellness coach, author, and creator of the Deeply Happy Expert Series. She serves clients globally via phone and video consultation.
Get in touch at http://www.deeplyhappy.com/contact/

Latest posts by Teray Garchitorena Kunishi, ND (see all)

Your diet is an essential key to healing depression and anxiety naturally. You cannot successfully get off antidepressants, for example, without a mood-supporting diet. This can be daunting to figure out, given all the diets, superfoods and instant cures your friends post on Facebook. Fortunately, from a foundational standpoint, there’s a simple place to start. If you change nothing else in your diet now, do this: Make sure every meal contains 20-30 grams of protein. Yup, every meal. Ideally animal protein at least half of that time. Why protein? It has a low glycemic index, which means it will not spike your blood sugar. Imbalanced blood sugar triggers your stress hormone, cortisol, which in turn can make you feel anxious. Blood sugar swings also deprive your brain of consistent fuel, which can result in depressive thoughts, lack of focus, and fatigue. Real life example: A low protein breakfast (like granola, or a low fat mocha latte) is often followed by a late-morning (or mid-afternoon) energy and mood crash. If you’re like me, that crash often results in a desperate pastry purchase (“Stale chocolate croissant? It’ll do!”) which you almost always regret. A solid breakfast of 2-3 eggs, or a piece of last night’s chicken dinner, on the other hand, keeps energy and mood stable, making you more effective and yes, happier, throughout the day. Why is it important to eat animal protein? Animal protein always contains all the essential amino acids, which are the raw materiasl for your feel-good chemicals: serotonin, dopamine and GABA. “Essential” means you have to get it from food – the body cannot manufacture it....