Gallup Poll: Stress on the Rise Among Americans
Americans are growing increasingly stressed by the decade, according to the latest Gallup survey.
Americans are growing increasingly stressed by the decade, according to the latest Gallup survey.
While 76 percent of U.S. college students reported feeling enjoyment much of the prior day, majorities also reported feeling stressed (66 percent) and worried (51 percent), in addition to being lonely and sad.
More than 70 per cent of children aged 7-12 are now afraid of climate change according to the results of a survey.
The far-left New York Times advised its readers about how to “soothe election stress” in a guide published to Twitter on Tuesday night, ahead of a highly anticipated red wave.
Americans are experiencing a spike in anxiety in President Biden’s America due to rising prices, supply chain issues, and global uncertainty, the American Psychological Association’s annual “Stress in America” poll revealed.
Pet Partners worked with the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council to bring some furry cheer to counteract impeachment stress Wednesday afternoon.
House Democrats will hold a “discussion” Friday on “adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) and the Trump Administration’s policies and proposals.”
Over 20 Percent of Incoming College Freshmen Claim to Be Disabled
A new mental health study reveals that young people spend more than six hours each day feeling “stressed out.”
Therapists across the country say that business is booming from patients who say President Trump is the source of their “political anxiety.”
A professor at the University of Georgia has introduced a “stress reduction policy” that will allow his students to choose their own grade.
Losing your smartphone is often nearly as stressful as the threat of a terrorist attack, according to a recent report.
Dr. Pete Sulack, stress expert and founder of StressRX.com, told Breitbart News on Friday that the media bears some of the blame for the deep distress felt by some Hillary Clinton supporters, and the public unrest, after Tuesday’s election results.
Fifty-two percent of American adults 18 and older say that the 2016 election is a very or somewhat significant source of stress, according to a survey by the American Psychological Association.
In a new study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research, scientists from the University of California, Davis and the Harvard University Center for the Environment suggest that violent crime is precipitated by air pollution.
During a town hall in Jamaica, President Obama was asked by one of the young people attending how he dealt with so much stress in his job as president of the United States.