Table of contents
1. It’s fair to say that as a global society, we’ve got much better at discussing mental health over the past few years. Campaigns by big multilateral organisations, like the World Health Organisation and the United Nations, have helped to elevate the status of certain mood disorders, as well as common mental illnesses like depression and anxiety, while pushing mental health up the priority list of policymakers. In popular culture, greater visibility has been given to those suffering from mental illness, and more and more businesses are highlighting the importance of mental health in conversations about overall wellbeing.
2. The gut is the second brain
3. What is a gut microbiome?
4. What you can do
Illustrated by Erin Rommel
It’s fair to say that as a global society, we’ve got much better at discussing mental health over the past few years. Campaigns by big multilateral organisations, like the World Health Organisation and the United Nations, have helped to elevate the status of certain mood disorders, as well as common mental illnesses like depression and anxiety, while pushing mental health up the priority list of policymakers. In popular culture, greater visibility has been given to those suffering from mental illness, and more and more businesses are highlighting the importance of mental health in conversations about overall wellbeing.
We hear a lot about self care on the internet, with social media apps like Instagram becoming a place where individuals can source tips to help them to look after themselves. One issue we tend to overlook though, is the impact our gut health has on our mental wellbeing. And yet, it’s a relationship that has been recognised by the medical community for over 100 years, since the work of George Porter Phillips in the early 20th Century. Porter Phillips found that improving the gut health of patients suffering with what was at that time referred to as “melancholia” (clinical depression) via a specific diet rich in gut-friendly bacteria led to improved outcomes in their mental health.
So what exactly is the relationship between our gut health and our mental health? How can improving one help the other? What on earth is a microbiome? And what can we do to ensure our gut is in optimum condition, thereby supporting our mental health?
The gut is the second brain
“You may have heard that the gut is known as the second brain,” Lauren Windas, registered nutritionist and co-founder of ARDERE, tells Daye. “Yes, it’s true!” She continues, “research now shows a pivotal connection between the two organs, known as the gut-brain axis.”