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How to recognize signs of bipolar disorder

How to recognize signs of bipolar disorder

Yahoo24-03-2025
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (WTNH) — In today's Health headlines, we're talking about bipolar disorder awareness day, which is upcoming this month, and how to recognize the signs of this complex mental health condition.
Dr. Yann Poncin, psychiatrist and professor at Yale Child Study Center joined Good Morning Connecticut at 9 a.m. to discuss.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Pregnant wife of former NBA player speaks out after surviving shark bite

Eleonora Boi, the pregnant wife of former NBA player Danilo Gallinari, is speaking out for the first time after surviving a shark bite off a beach in Puerto Rico. "I have to say, I'm traumatized," Boi told "Good Morning America." Gallinari and Boi, a sports journalist from Italy who was six months pregnant at the time, had been swimming in waist-deep water with their two young children when Boi said she was suddenly bit on the thigh. "I felt a strong pain, and my thigh was burning, but my idea was, 'Maybe it's a huge jellyfish.' But in the reality, it wasn't a jellyfish," Boi said. "I started crying and screaming and I was screaming for help in Italian," the mom of two added. Gallinari said he rushed to help. "As soon as everyone started screaming, I had my son with me. I ran towards my wife and my daughter," said the former NBA forward, who currently plays with the Vaqueros de Bayamón in Puerto Rico. The couple picked up their children and rushed to shore, where they said a woman helped put pressure on Boi's wound with a clean towel until help arrived. "'Oh, my God,' I was saying, 'I don't want to die' and 'I want that my baby is safe.' And I was crying. I was desperate, really desperate," Boi recalled. Boi and Gallinari said they are grateful to the good Samaritan who stayed by their side. "She was an angel. Danilo was with me, and she helped so much. I would like to say thank you to this woman, because I don't know her name, and I just want to say thank you to her, because she helped a lot," said Boi. Boi said she was transported to a hospital where doctors ran hours of tests to make sure the baby was OK before they decided on an operation for her. "After they gave us confirmation that the kid was OK and nothing happened to him, then they started the surgery process," Gallinari said. Boi's doctors told her they had never treated a shark bite victim but expect Boi to make a full recovery. Boi currently has weekly visits with her doctor and is due to give birth in November. Despite the good news about her physical health, Boi said the ordeal has taken a toll on her mentally. "I have to be honest, it's not easy, because when I remember, I'm still scared -- and, you know, it's difficult," Boi said. Gallinari added, "I think that the body in this situation recovers faster than the mind, and that's something that, you know, you don't have to be ashamed of or scared of."

Importance of colorectal cancer screenings
Importance of colorectal cancer screenings

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Importance of colorectal cancer screenings

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What is orthosomnia? How obsession with wearable tech could impact sleep

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What is orthosomnia? How obsession with wearable tech could impact sleep

Millions of Americans are turning to devices to keep track of everything from heart rates to sleep. But the latter could pose a problem for some wearable tech users who end up more stressed than rested when it comes to monitoring things like their sleep score. Nancy Chen, a marketing manager and part-time boxing instructor, who was drawn to having access to sleep data, told "Good Morning America" that her device became a problem of its own. "Sleep has always mattered a lot to me, and I would always get a little stressed if I knew I wasn't gonna sleep enough," she said. "It was this cycle of, I knew that my sleep score was gonna be bad, and then I was kind of like stressed about it. It was too much data." The constant monitoring can lead to a phenomenon known as orthosomnia, defined by the Sleep Foundation as an obsessive pursuit of optimal sleep that is driven by sleep tracker data. "Orthosomnia refers to individuals for whom tracking may have become or is potentially stressful," sleep scientist Rebecca Robbins, Ph.D., an assistant professor of medicine at Brigham and Women's Hospital, told "GMA." "The information they receive stresses them out, and then they it causes them to struggle the next night." The harder people with orthosomnia try to control their sleep, the worse it gets. While health trackers can have many benefits, they may be triggering for perfectionists or those with Type A personalities, Robbins said. "The thing about sleep is it's not always going to be perfect every night, and sleep is a function of all of the things that we experience in a typical day -- and some of that might be stressful," she said. While there are many benefits to health trackers, including understanding one's sleep patterns, if you're experiencing stress from those trackers, Robbins recommends putting it in a drawer and returning to some healthy sleep strategies. "Unwinding before bedtime, calming your mind, using some breathing activities, journaling before bedtime, a warm shower," she suggested, adding that people should try to be "filling the moments before we want to be falling asleep with healthy, relaxing activities."

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