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Articles tagged with "ThaiCulture" - explore health, wellness, and travel insights.

1,291 articles
5 min read

Unraveling the Truth About Stress: Why Not All Tension Is Harmful and What Thais Can Do About It

news exercise

The latest research, highlighted in a recent Guardian feature, tells a surprising story about stress: not only is all stress not equal, but some forms may actually benefit us, while others—especially when misunderstood or managed poorly—can lead to long-term harm. As daily life in Thailand grows ever more complex and fast-paced, understanding this multifaceted force is more important than ever.

In Thailand, the cultural belief of “jai yen yen”—keeping a “cool heart”—is often considered a shield against stressful situations. Yet, as research delves deeper into the biology and psychology of stress, it becomes clear that our reactions are shaped not just by lifestyle or culture, but also by early life experiences, community support, and even our own beliefs about stress itself. This has profound implications for Thai families, workers, and students feeling the mounting pressures of modern life.

#Stress #MentalHealth #Thailand +5 more
3 min read

Weekend Warriors in Thailand: One or Two Exercise Days May Match Daily Workouts for Longevity

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A large international study offers hopeful news for busy Thai adults who struggle to fit daily exercise. When weekly activity reaches 150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous movement, concentrating it into one or two days—the “weekend warrior” approach—may deliver similar longevity benefits as spreading workouts across the week. The findings, published by a leading heart health organization, suggest total weekly volume matters more than frequency.

Researchers analyzed data from over 93,000 participants using wrist devices to measure movement accurately. Participants were grouped into three categories: weekend warriors (150 minutes or more on one or two days), active regulars (activity spread through the week), and inactive individuals. Over eight years, both active groups experienced lower risks of death from all causes, cardiovascular disease, and cancer compared with the inactive group. Weekend warriors saw a 32% reduction in all-cause mortality, a 31% reduction for cardiovascular deaths, and a 21% reduction for cancer. Active regulars achieved similar gains, though slightly smaller in some categories. The study underscores that the total amount of activity matters more than how often it is performed.

#exercise #weekendwarrior #thailandhealth +7 more
2 min read

Debunking the “Wonder Supplement”: What Thai readers should know about cancer, heart health, and aging claims

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A new health buzz surrounds a so-called “wonder supplement” that tabloids claim could prevent cancer, improve heart health, and slow skin aging. While international outlets spark curiosity, Thai readers deserve a careful, evidence-based view on whether this hype translates to real-world benefits.

Media caution is warranted. A recent headline from a prominent U.S. outlet highlights a dietary compound supposedly delivering triple benefits, but experts stress that such bold claims require long-term human trials to confirm real-world effectiveness. The World Health Organization also emphasizes diet and lifestyle as the foundation of disease prevention, rather than relying on a single supplement.

#supplements #cancerprevention #hearthealth +7 more
3 min read

Evening Workouts and Sleep: What Thai Readers Should Know About Timing and Health

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A growing body of research is challenging the idea that any time is good for a workout. In particular, late-evening and nighttime exercise—especially when vigorous—may affect how well you sleep and influence markers of heart health. As urban Thais increasingly flock to parks and 24-hour gyms in Bangkok and other cities, understanding exercise timing has practical implications for daily well-being.

Many people in Thai cities juggle work, traffic, and social life, often fitting workouts after office hours. Evening strolls near Chiang Mai’s moat and HIIT sessions after work are common sights. A comprehensive 2025 study examined biometric data from more than 14,000 physically active individuals, compiling over four million nights of sleep. It found a clear dose-response: later and more intense evening workouts tended to delay sleep onset, shorten total sleep time, reduce sleep quality, raise nighttime resting heart rate, and lower heart rate variability. The effect persisted even among those who were physically fit, particularly when exercise ended within four hours of bedtime, according to research summarized by major outlets and peer-reviewed studies.

#sleepquality #exercisetiming #thailandhealth +7 more
5 min read

Evening Workouts: The New Research Revealing Their Surprising Impact on Sleep Quality

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A new wave of scientific studies is challenging the popular belief that exercise at any time can boost well-being, highlighting a crucial factor for night-owl fitness enthusiasts: the clock. Recent research reported by Fortune see the article and corroborated by peer-reviewed studies has found that evening and nighttime workouts—especially when intense—may not only disrupt your sleep quality but also influence key markers of cardiovascular health. As health-conscious Thais flock to recreational parks and 24-hour fitness centers across Bangkok and major cities, the emerging science on exercise timing carries practical significance for millions striving for both physical and mental well-being.

#SleepQuality #ExerciseTiming #ThailandHealth +7 more
4 min read

Intense Exercise Really Does Make Time Drag, New Study Confirms

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If you often feel like your intense workouts at the gym seem to last forever, you are not alone—and science may finally have an explanation. According to a new study published in the journal Brain and Behaviour and reported by The Guardian, pushing yourself hard during exercise can cause a “time warp” effect that makes your workout feel subjectively longer than it actually is. This finding could have important implications for anyone hoping to improve their fitness—or simply survive a particularly sweaty spin class—with researchers suggesting that our perception of time may be heavily influenced by the discomfort and effort of the activity itself (The Guardian).

#ExerciseScience #TimePerception #FitnessMotivation +7 more
1 min read

Medical Cannabis Shows Promise in Cancer Care, Landmark Study Finds

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A landmark international study suggests medical cannabis may support cancer treatment, potentially slowing disease progression and improving quality of life for patients. Described as the largest investigation to date, the research tracked thousands of cancer patients prescribed cannabis-based medicines as part of their care. While results are encouraging, experts caution that longer, controlled studies are needed to confirm cause and effect and determine optimal dosing. Data from leading medical centers and public health researchers indicates significant relief from pain, nausea, and anxiety, alongside improvements in quality of life for some participants.

#medicalcannabis #cancercare #thailandhealth +5 more
4 min read

Medical Cannabis Shows Promise in Cancer Treatment, Landmark Study Reveals

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A groundbreaking new study has added weight to the growing evidence that medical cannabis could play an important role in the fight against cancer, capturing international attention this week. The research, described as the largest-ever investigation into medical cannabis and cancer outcomes, found that certain cannabis-based medicines may help slow disease progression and improve quality of life for people diagnosed with cancer. Published results have sparked hope among patients, clinicians, and medical researchers globally—including in Thailand, where conversations around both cannabis regulation and cancer care remain highly relevant. [Source: The Guardian]

#MedicalCannabis #CancerResearch #ThailandHealth +6 more
6 min read

New Insights on Stress: Separating Myth from Reality and What Thais Should Know

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A new wave of research challenges long-held beliefs about stress, revealing that not all stress is harmful and that the impact of stress—and how we should respond—depends on far more than we once imagined. As Thais increasingly grapple with work, family, and digital pressures, the latest scientific insights offer fresh hope—and practical strategies—for managing daily life (The Guardian).

Stress has long been cast as the villain in our health narratives, blamed for physical ills, emotional burnout, and even social collapse. Yet emerging evidence shows the story is far more nuanced, with researchers revealing that not only is some stress “good”—it’s necessary for human growth and resilience. For Thai readers bombarded by news of a ‘stress epidemic’, this signals a needed shift in public understanding and policy.

#Stress #MentalHealth #Wellbeing +7 more
4 min read

Rethinking Stress: What Thais Should Know as Science Refines Our Warmest Assumptions

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New research is challenging the idea that all stress is harmful. For Thais juggling work, family, and digital demands, these insights offer both clarity and practical strategies to navigate daily life.

Across workplaces and homes, stress has long been blamed for health problems and burnout. Fresh findings reveal a more nuanced picture: some stress can actually support growth and resilience. This shifts public conversations in Thailand toward balanced approaches to stress management.

#stress #mentalhealth #wellbeing +6 more
2 min read

Thai Minds Learn to Filter Distractions: New Neuroscience Insight for Focus in Busy Lives

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A new study provides compelling evidence that the brain can learn to ignore persistent distractions. The finding offers practical implications for Bangkok commuters, Thai students, and workers navigating dense sensory environments. Led by researchers from Leipzig University and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the study, published in The Journal of Neuroscience, shows that the visual system adapts to repeated distractions by gradually filtering them out at the earliest stages of perception. This insight is relevant for Thai readers facing urban noise, visual clutter, and digital interruptions.

#neuroscience #focus #distractions +7 more
4 min read

The “Wonder Supplement” Trend: Can It Really Prevent Cancer, Fight Aging, and Protect Your Heart?

news nutrition

A new wave of health buzz surrounds a so-called “wonder supplement” that, according to recent headlines, might prevent cancer, boost heart health, and slow skin aging. With claims making the rounds in international media, including the New York Post, Thai health enthusiasts are keen to know: Does this supplement live up to the hype – and should it be part of everyday wellness here in Thailand?

The recent New York Post article, “The wonder supplement you’ve never heard of prevents cancer, makes your heart healthier and slows skin aging” (source), shines a spotlight on a dietary compound that supposedly delivers a triple health benefit. While the article stops short of naming the supplement in its headline and lead (pending full content access), such bold claims inevitably spark debate among health professionals and everyday consumers alike. For Thai audiences accustomed to a surge of imported wellness trends—ranging from collagen powders to herbal extracts—skepticism and curiosity go hand-in-hand.

#Supplements #CancerPrevention #HeartHealth +7 more
2 min read

Time Perception in Hard Workouts: New Study Explains Why Exercise Feels Longer

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A new study in Brain and Behaviour reveals a neural and experiential reason why intense workouts can drag on. Researchers found that during demanding exercise, people tend to overestimate elapsed time by about 10 percent. The effect, described as a “time warp,” is linked to the heightened focus on bodily signals like pain and fatigue. This insight has implications for both personal training and how fitness programs are designed to keep people engaged.

#exercisescience #timeperception #fitnessmotivation +7 more
4 min read

Your Brain Can Learn to Tune Out Annoying Distractions, Researchers Find

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A new study has provided compelling evidence that the human brain can actually learn to ignore persistent distractions, promising practical insights for everyone from Bangkok commuters to Thai students easily sidetracked by environmental noise or visual clutter. Led by teams from Leipzig University and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, the research, published in The Journal of Neuroscience on April 17, 2025, reveals that our visual system adapts to repeated distractions by gradually filtering them out—even at the earliest stages of perception (SciTech Daily, 2025).

#Neuroscience #Focus #Distractions +7 more
2 min read

Brain’s Social Calculator: Why We’re Generous to Some and Not to Others

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A new international study identifies a brain region that helps decide how generous we are toward friends versus strangers. Researchers from Germany and South Africa found that damage to the basolateral amygdala (BLA) reduces sharing with anyone outside one’s closest circle, while generosity toward close friends remains relatively intact. The study, recently published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, sheds light on the biological roots of kindness and self-interest and could inform understanding of social disorders.

#generosity #neuroscience #thaiculture +6 more
3 min read

Contagious Stress: How to Stop the Spread and Protect Thai Wellbeing

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Stress is not just an individual burden—it can spread through groups like a social pathogen. New research highlighted by national outlets shows that exposure to others’ anxiety and pressure can trigger your own stress response. For Thai readers facing work, school, and the constant scroll of social media, understanding stress contagion and practical ways to shield yourself is timely and essential.

Why this matters in Thailand Thai culture centers on social bonds and community—sharing meals, helping families, and gathering at temples. In such a setting, emotional exchanges shape everyday life. When stress runs high at work or in family networks, the mood can ripple through households and workplaces, often without conscious awareness. Even tense messages on popular messaging apps and social feeds can amplify anxiety across groups.

#stresscontagion #mentalhealth #thailand +7 more
5 min read

Stress Is Contagious: New Research Reveals How to Stop the Spread

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As global uncertainties and digital connectivity entwine daily life, new research has found that stress doesn’t only affect individuals—it can spread from person to person like a virus. Recent studies covered in The Washington Post highlight the science behind “stress contagion,” where exposure to the anxieties and pressures of others can trigger your own stress response. For Thai readers navigating pressures at work, school, or even scrolling through social media, understanding stress contagion and strategies to avoid catching it is both timely and essential (Washington Post, 2025).

#StressContagion #MentalHealth #Thailand +7 more
3 min read

The ‘Social Calculator’ in Your Brain: Why We’re Selectively Generous

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A groundbreaking international study has pinpointed a specific region in the brain responsible for deciding how generous we are with friends versus strangers. Researchers from Germany and South Africa have discovered that damage to the basolateral amygdala (BLA) sharply reduces our willingness to share with anyone outside our closest social circle—while generosity toward close friends stays intact. The findings, published recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, offer intriguing new insights into the biological roots of kindness and selfishness, and may have implications for understanding social disorders.

#generosity #neuroscience #ThaiCulture +7 more
5 min read

Breaking the Scroll: New Advice on How to Make Your Brain Crave Movement Over Screen Time

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A fresh wave of research and practical advice is emerging for those hoping to swap the comfort of phone scrolling for the energizing benefits of physical movement—a trend with urgent relevance for Thais of all ages as smartphone use, sedentary work and study, and stressful news cycles become daily realities. According to clinical psychologist Dr. Diana Hill and movement specialist Katy Bowman, co-authors of “I Know I Should Exercise But… 44 Reasons We Don’t Move and How to Get Over Them,” habitual screen use—especially when we’re stressed or tired—can subtly trap us in cycles of fleeting dopamine rewards, leaving us craving ever more screen time and less inclined to break out for a walk, a stretch, or a dance session. But their message, backed by findings in neuroscience and behavioral therapy, is hopeful: with practice and a few novel strategies, it is possible to retrain your brain to yearn for movement instead of another scroll through Facebook or TikTok (full report: KCBX/NPR).

#ScreenTime #PhysicalActivity #MentalHealth +10 more
6 min read

Doom Spending: The Costly Comfort That's Fueling More Stress — Not Less

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A new wave of stressed-out spending, dubbed “doom spending,” is sweeping across generations, promising quick emotional relief but bringing longer-term pain for wallets and mental wellbeing alike. The phenomenon has sparked attention from psychologists and financial experts who warn that, despite its appeal, impulsive retail therapy in response to stress or pessimism about the future is not the stress-buster many hope it will be. With Thailand and other nations facing economic uncertainties — from global inflation to job insecurity — this trend offers a timely cautionary tale for Thai readers navigating their own financial decisions and stress management strategies.

#doomspending #stressmanagement #mentalhealth +9 more
5 min read

New Research Reveals: Touch is Our Most Complex Sense, Shaped by a Vast Landscape of Cellular Sensors

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It might be easy to take touch for granted—until something goes wrong. But in recent research led by Harvard neurobiologist David Ginty, and reported by Quanta Magazine on April 16, 2025, scientists are uncovering an astonishingly intricate “landscape” of cellular sensors that give rise to the rich, nuanced sense of touch. Far surpassing the simplicity of earlier textbook diagrams, these findings paint touch as the most complex human sense, rooted in a vast, diverse family of sensory neurons scattered across skin and internal organs (Quanta Magazine).

#TouchScience #Neuroscience #ThailandHealth +10 more
3 min read

Tackling Doom Spending: Mindful Ways Thai Shoppers Can Protect Health and Wallets

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A new wave of stressed shoppers is reshaping behavior worldwide, with many turning to impulsive buying as a quick mood boost. For Thai readers navigating economic uncertainty, doom spending poses a real risk to mental well-being and personal finances. Experts warn that while shopping can offer temporary relief, it often deepens stress when the effects fade and bills arrive.

Doom spending is described as compulsive buying in response to anxiety, hopelessness, or fear about the future. A psychologist explains that under uncertainty, people seek quick control and comfort, and spending money can become a coping mechanism. The pattern is not simply occasional splurging; it is a response to negative emotions that can spiral into longer-term financial and emotional strain. Studies and expert insights show that the emotional high from purchases is short-lived, followed by guilt and heightened worry about money.

#doomspending #stressmanagement #mentalhealth +9 more
3 min read

Touch: Thailand’s Lens on the Most Complex Human Sense

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Touch is more intricate than we often admit. A new wave of research led by a renowned neurobiologist from Harvard and summarized by Quanta Magazine in April 2025 reveals a vast landscape of cellular sensors that shape our sense of touch. The study describes touch as the most complex human sense, built from a diverse family of sensory neurons scattered across skin and internal organs. In Thai media, this finding invites a deeper look at how touch connects with health, education, culture, and daily life.

#touchscience #neuroscience #thailandhealth +10 more
3 min read

Train Your Brain to Move: Practical Ways for Thais to Swap Scrolls for Steps

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A new wave of research and practical guidance helps people replace endless phone scrolling with the energizing benefits of physical movement. This has urgent relevance for Thais of all ages, as smartphone use, sedentary work and study, and constant news cycles shape daily life. Clinician Dr. Diana Hill and movement expert Katy Bowman argue that stressful periods can trap us in quick dopamine hits from screens. But with practice and new strategies, you can retrain your brain to crave movement instead of another scroll.

#screentime #physicalactivity #mentalhealth +10 more