Mediterranean Diet Helps Beat Depression in Young Men

Switching to a Mediterranean diet significantly improved symptoms of depression in young men, a new study report.

Young men with a poor diet saw a significant improvement in their symptoms of depression when they switched to a healthy Mediterranean diet, a new study shows. Depression is a common mental health condition that affects approximately 1 million Australians each year. It is a significant risk factor for suicide, the leading cause of death in young adults.

The 12-week randomized control trial, conducted by researchers from the University of Technology Sydney, was recently published in the peer-reviewed American Journal of Clinical Nutrition. Lead researcher Jessica Bayes, a PhD candidate in the UTS Faculty of Health, said the study was the first randomized clinical trial to assess the impact of a Mediterranean diet on the symptoms of depression in young men (aged 18-25).

“We were surprised by how willing the young men were to take on a new diet,” Bayes said. “Those assigned to the Mediterranean diet were able to significantly change their original diets, under the guidance of a nutritionist, over a short time frame. It suggests that medical doctors and psychologists should consider referring depressed young men to a nutritionist or dietitian as an important component of treating clinical depression,” she said.

The diet used in the study was rich in colourful vegetables, legumes and wholegrains, oily fish, olive oil and raw, unsalted nuts.

The study contributes to the emerging field of nutritional psychiatry, which aims to explore the effect that specific nutrients, foods and dietary patterns can have on mental health. The diet used in the study was rich in colourful vegetables, legumes and wholegrains, oily fish, olive oil, and raw, unsalted nuts.

“The primary focus was on increasing diet quality with fresh wholefoods while reducing the intake of ‘fast’ foods, sugar and processed red meat,” Bayes said. “There are lots of reasons why scientifically we think food affects mood. For example, around 90 per cent of serotonin, a chemical that helps us feel happy, is made in our gut by our gut microbes. There is emerging evidence that these microbes can communicate to the brain via the vagus nerve, in what is called the gut-brain axis. To have beneficial microbes, we need to feed them fibre, which is found in legumes, fruits and vegetables,” she said.

Roughly 30 percent of depressed patients fail to adequately respond to standard treatments for major depressive disorder such as cognitive behaviour therapy and anti-depressant medications.

“Nearly all our participants stayed with the program, and many were keen to continue the diet once the study ended, which shows how effective, tolerable and worthwhile they found the intervention.”

Source: University of Sydney
Original Research: Closed access.
“The effect of a Mediterranean diet on the symptoms of depression in young males (the “AMMEND” study): A Randomized Control Trial” by Jessica Bayes et al. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition

Counselling Teenagers

The teenage years are one of the most challenging phases for both teens and their careers. Teenagerss usually start to face a lot of new pressures and can sometimes react in not so healthy ways when they encounter a problem. They may need counselling to cope with these problems and take the right approach to solving them. Some struggles are a normal part of growing up, like experimenting new ideas, dealing with peer groups, and going through changes in identity, interests, and moods, they usually characterise by no middle term ground.

When faced with a problem, teenagers usually go to the extreme thinking and start to automatically think that this is the worst problem ever. How can you deal with such type of thinking? Do you think it will always be this way? Can you think of a time when it was not bad?  These questions will help bring the young person into the ‘middle’ and help them to see all sides to make a decision.

When counselling teenagers it’s important that they feel that they can assert their own feelings and ideas about a circumstance or situation. Counselling helps them to be more assertive in a positive way will help them work through the issues that they’re going through. Functional communication, verbal or not, allows the young person to express their own beliefs and their own needs and they need to be able to do that without being judged.