Latest Updates
-
Spicy Home Style Chicken Masala Recipe: Your New Favorite Dinner -
Who Is Abhijeet Dipke? The Man Behind India's Viral Cockroach Janta Party -
BC Khanduri, Former Uttarakhand CM and Army Veteran, Passes Away at 91 -
"Maa, Mujhe Yahan Se Lene Aa Jao": She Begged To Come Home, Nobody Came -
Nachos Recipe: Your Go-To Crunchy Party Snack -
Hacks 101: How To Save Your Makeup When It Starts to Melt -
Always Online, Always Exhausted: Expert Explains The Mental Wellness Cost Of Digital Work Culture -
South Style Meal Vegetable Kurma Recipe: A Flavorful Delight -
Leaked: Alia And Sharvari On India's Got Latent Season 2 — But Why Are Fans Disappointed? -
"These Are Not Jokes": Neha Dhupia Calls Out Wife Humour, And The Mental Health Cost Is Real
Love And Romance, Perfect Stress Busters

In the fast-paced lifestyle of today, guess what makes the perfect stress-buster? It is nothing but oodles of love and a lot more.
Couples who hug, kiss have lower levels of stress hormones in their bodies, a new study has suggested. The Swiss study, reported in the journal Psychosomatic Medicine, point to one potential reason that close relationships and marriage, in particular have been linked to better health.
Lead author Dr Beate Ditzen said intimacy was thought to improve hormone levels simply by boosting mood. She, however, stressed that couples should not race to express more intimacy as such, but rather find things to do together that create positive feelings for both partners.
Intimacy means different things for different couples, Dr Ditzen said. "This means that there is no specific behaviour that couples should show in everyday life,' News.com.au quoted her, as saying. Rather, all kinds of behaviour which couples themselves would consider intimate ... might be beneficial, the expert added.
To reach the conclusion, researchers from the University of Zurich in Switzerland studied 51 mostly married German couples for one week, and found those who reported more physical contact, from holding hands to sexual intercourse, had lower levels of the so-called stress hormone, cortisol, in their saliva.
Cortisol is behind several stress-related changes in the body and is secreted in higher levels during the body''s fight or flight response to stress. The finding found that couples who reported more problems at work had the biggest drop in levels of the hormone through intimacy.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications