
Anxiety is the most common mental health problem - here's how tech could help manage it
Anxiety
disorders are the world's most common mental health problem. But it isn't always easy to get professional help, with long waiting lists in many countries.
Worldwide, only about 28 per cent of people with anxiety receive treatment. The figure is similar for the UK, and in the US about 37 per cent receive a treatment. This is due to a number of factors such as lack of resources, including mental health staff, and stigma associated with mental health problems.
But if you're struggling to get help, there are things you could try at home in the meantime - including some novel technologies. To understand how they work, let's first take a look at how anxiety is expressed in the brain and body.
The symptoms of anxiety are cognitive and emotional as well as physiological. They can include trouble concentrating and making decisions, feeling irritable or tense and having heart palpitations or shaking. Trouble sleeping and feelings of panic or impending danger are also common.
These symptoms often start in childhood and adolescence. Sadly, it frequently continues into adulthood, especially if untreated.
There are many genetic and environmental factors involved in the development of anxiety. These can include competition and pressure at school, university or work or financial worries and lack of job security. Social isolation and loneliness are also common factors, often a result of retirement, home working or stemming from bullying or maltreatment in childhood.
Such experiences may even rewire our brains. For example, our neuroimaging study has shown that maltreatment in childhood is linked to changes in the connectivity of the brain's centromedial amygdala, which plays a key role in processing emotions, including fear and anxiety, and the anterior insula, which processes emotion among other things.
Anxiety is commonly associated with depression or other conditions, including attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and autism spectrum disorder.
During the COVID pandemic when the prevalence of anxiety and depression increased by 25 per cent, people with such neurodevelopmental conditions exhibited more emotional problems than others.
According to the Children's Commissioner this is still on the rise with 500 children per day being referred to mental health services for anxiety, more than double the rate pre-pandemic.
Researchers are still uncovering new ways for professionals to help treat such people. For example, in our recent study, we noticed that suicidal thoughts and depression were more common in children with anxiety who were also very impulsive. This could impact the treatments they receive. So the science of how to best treat anxiety is constantly moving forward.
Tech solutions
Unfortunately though, waiting lists for even receiving a diagnosis can sometimes take years. Neurotechnology can, at least in part, help fill the gap before symptoms get worse. There are a number of startup companies in the anxiety space, working on both hardware and software for anxiety management.
Technology for managing anxiety is rapidly advancing, offering alternatives and complements to traditional therapies. Moonbird, for example, uses a handheld device that guides users through paced breathing with gentle physical movements.
You essentially feel the device move in your hand and breathe along with it. Research has shown that such breathing can help the nervous system to reduce anxiety symptoms.
The company
Parasym
influences brain regions involved in mood and stress regulation. People can use it by wearing a small device that applies mild electrical micro impulses running through the vagus nerve, which runs from the ears and downwards trough the neck and activates a key part of the nervous system.
Neurovalens and Flow Neuroscience are exploring non-invasive brain stimulation, such as transcranial "direct current stimulation (tDCS)". This can be applied by using electrodes placed on the scalp to deliver a mild, constant electrical current to alter brain activity.
These devices ultimately target the prefrontal cortex to support the regulation of emotions. One scientific review of tDCS studies in anxiety has concluded that some research clearly showed benefits of tDCS for treating anxiety symptoms, although larger scale and longer duration studies were needed.
How we experience life events and feel or react to them also influences physiological functions such as our heart rate. You will have experienced how having a meaningful conversation creates a special connection between two people.
This can actually manifest in the body as increased synchronisation of your heart rates and other functions. This is termed "physiological synchrony" and is thought to be important for positive social interaction.
Unfortunately, in common conditions of anxiety, including social anxiety and postpartum maternal anxiety, heart rate can become less variable and therefore less able to synchronise. Therefore, a device that promotes physiological synchrony would be beneficial. The company
LYEONS Neurotech
is currently developing such a device, targeting anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and ADHD.
On the digital side, Headspace offers structured meditation and cognitive behavioural therapy based programmes. Similarly, ieso offer typed text-based
CBT
therapy for mild to moderate anxiety and low mood. These platforms use guided meditation, breathing exercises and behavioural tools to help users build emotion resilience and reduce anxious thought patterns.
Other emerging tools also include virtual reality, which is being explored for exposure therapy and immersive stress reduction, in particular. All these technologies have used scientific and medical information to offer diverse options that address both mind and body.
If we can halt the trend towards increasing numbers of people suffering from anxiety and find ways to improve access to effective treatments, it will lead to a better quality of life for individuals and their families, improved productivity and wellbeing at work and promote a flourishing society.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
an hour ago
- Time of India
City doctors blame ‘long Covid' for severe viral infections that have laid Kolkata low
1 2 Kolkata: The pandemic may have ended three years ago but it continues to cast its shadow on the city's healthscape. A past history of 'long or severe' Covid may have led to long-term weakening of respiratory and immune functions, making thousands in the city more vulnerable to recurrent infections, say doctors. Additionally, rapid weather fluctuations, sudden shifts from high humidity to rain, followed by intense heat combined with elevated levels of air pollution are further weakening the body's natural defences, leading to more frequent and severe infections, they say. Most private hospitals are now running at 90% occupancy with a majority of the patients suffering from Influenza A and other viral infections. You Can Also Check: Kolkata AQI | Weather in Kolkata | Bank Holidays in Kolkata | Public Holidays in Kolkata At Woodlands Hospital, around 75% of patients currently being treated for influenza and pneumonia are Covid survivors. "Particularly those who experienced moderate to severe illness have suffered lasting architectural and functional damage in the lungs. When individuals from this group, especially the elderly, come down with flu or pneumonia, their disease tends to be more severe. The risk is further compounded if they have underlying conditions like asthma, COPD, diabetes or a history of smoking," said Dipnarayan Mukherjee, microbiology consultant at the hospital. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like New Container Houses In Chom Thong Container House | Search Ads Search Now Undo According to Rajdip Sen, consultant physician at BP Poddar Hospital, post-Covid pulmonary complications are making individuals vulnerable to lower respiratory tract infections. "About 30% of influenza and pneumonia patients here have Covid history. In many of these cases, we are observing increased disease severity, particularly among those who had moderate to severe Covid," he said. Immune dysregulation following Covid may compromise the body's ability to mount an effective defence against common respiratory pathogens, Sen said and added that these patients "often present with a more aggressive clinical course, prolonged hypoxia and delayed recovery, necessitating closer monitoring and in some cases, extended hospitalisation." Charnock Hospital internal medicine consultant Jayanta Dutta said they, too, are receiving a "significant" number of patients with a history of severe Covid, many of them elderly. "It's possible that the elderly have some residual damage like fibrosis that makes them vulnerable to infections now. We have also seen growth in lung diseases like asthma, upper respiratory tract infections and COPD among those who had long Covid. This group remains prone to pneumonia and secondary bacterial infections due to lower immunity," he added. Manipal Hospital Dhakuria has received more than hundred patients with respiratory tract infection over the past 10 days. "Long Covid has left some with lung fibrosis which may have flared up now. Lower resistance induced by Covid and comorbidities could also be a reason in the case of elderly patients. But most severe Covid patients have no trace of lung damage or else this outbreak would have been far worse," said Manipal infectious diseases physician Sayan Chakrabarty. MS Purkait, medical superintendent, Techno India DAMA Hospital said, "If those with prior history of Covid, especially the elderly, develop influenza or pneumonia within a year of Covid, the symptoms are more serious and may require hospitalization. Sometimes, the infections may co-occur, making the treatment complex and prolonged. We are seeing many such cases now."


Time of India
6 hours ago
- Time of India
Mizoram reports 5 new Covid cases, active tally rises to 6: Officials
Aizawl: At least five people have been registered in Mizoram with Covid-19 infection during the past 24 hours, state Integrated Disease Surveillance Programme (IDSP) officials said on Friday. With these new cases, the total number of active Covid-19 cases stands at six. The officials said 19 people have been infected with the coronavirus in the state so far this year. All those identified as infected are from Aizawl district. No deaths due to Covid-19 have been reported this year and none of the patients are reported to have serious symptoms. Covid-19 infections were first identified in the state this year in mid-May, when two cases were reported. The officials said last year, 73 people were infected with Covid-19.


India Today
10 hours ago
- India Today
Brain drain: India battling mass cognitive decline, and no generation is spared
A silent medical crisis is unfolding among Indians—a multi-generational decline in cognitive health. From children to seniors, the pressures of modern life, evolving societal norms and underlying health issues are subtly eroding cognitive India's demographic advantage as a young nation, evidence points to a widespread reduction in brain health that threatens individual wellbeing and, ultimately, national progress. Dr Arun Garg, chairman, neurology and neurosciences, Medanta, Gurugram, sheds more light:advertisementTHE MULTI-GENERATIONAL IMPACTChildren and adolescents: India has nearly 470 million children. While early brain development is paramount at this age, increasing academic pressure and social isolation are taking a considerable toll on young minds. Research indicates that 38 per cent of students struggle with academic anxiety, half of them report declining performance and over 40 per cent experience isolation or sleep disturbances, making insomnia common. The emerging threat of substance abuse and the alarming statistic of 8.7 per cent of students contemplating suicide due to academic stress underscore the urgent need for intervention. Young and middle-aged adults: For adults navigating the demands of work, family and digital connectivity, the 'productivity paradox' often leads to increased fatigue and distraction. Digital overuse frequently results in sleep disorders, memory impairments, anxiety and even structural brain changes, all of this negatively impacting both professional output and personal wellbeing. They fail to register and retain required information, leading to an inability to recall and reproduce at later date and causing memory disturbance and cognitive Cognitive decline is not solely an inevitable consequence of ageing. Lifestyle diseases, such as hypertension, which are now widespread in India silently impair brain health by elevating the risk of strokes, dementia and Alzheimer's disease. Conditions such as Parkinson's disease and undiagnosed neurodevelopmental disorders, such as ADHD (Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder) or autism, significantly limit the quality of life, particularly when diagnosis and care are CAUSING IT?Lifestyle elements: Sedentary routines, processed foods, insufficient sleep and chronic stress represent as modern challenges hindering brain vitality. Poor diet and lack of physical activity increase the risk of neurological disorders while daily stress and irregular sleep patterns accelerate cognitive toxins: Urbanisation increases exposure to air pollutants and various chemicals, many of which are linked to neurological and digital influences: The social stigma surrounding mental health, coupled with constant online exposure, fosters anxiety, isolation and diminished attention, particularly among the youth. Practices such as 'doomscrolling' and excessive screen-time subtly undermine focus and heighten emotional awareness: Despite the growing discourse, access to mental health resources remains limited. Only 2 per cent of the struggling youth reportedly seek professional help, reflecting systemic gaps in infrastructure, training and societal understanding. Families and even educational institutions often fail to identify the early signs, thereby delaying crucial support and medical CONSEQUENCESIndividual wellbeing: The personal cost manifests as diminished quality of life, strained relationships and unrealised and societal burden: Over 150 million Indians are estimated to require mental healthcare even as untreated cognitive decline imposes significant burdens on productivity, education, healthcare and overall national TO FIX IT?Through collaborative effort, open dialogue and decisive action, India can strive to build a healthier and more supportive ecosystem for the cognitive wellbeing of its action: Prioritising adequate sleep, regular exercise, nutritious diets and digital detoxification can safeguard brain health at any and community support: Early intervention, fostering open conversations within families, and promoting community awareness are vital steps to break the silence and stigma associated with cognitive health and systemic change: India must strategically invest in school counsellors, facilitate early diagnosis and integrate mental health services nationwide. This commitment will transform discussions into tangible support, ensuring accessibility not just for the privileged but every to India Today Magazine- EndsMust Watch