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5 Most Stressful Cities

By FreeTraffic • Oct 19th, 2009 • Category: Diabetes

Psychiatrist Stephen Dwindle conducted a new analysis of the top 40 urban areas within the U.S. and has determined the 5 most stressful cities. Based on the data, the most stressful city in America is Chicago, Illinois, followed by Los Angeles, New York City, Cleveland, and Providence. Inhabitants of these cities are discovering that life isn’t as stress-free as it used to be.

A number of factors were taken into reflection in the analysis. For one thing, quality of life factors were studied. Unemployment statistics from the Bureau of Labor and Statistics were also considered. Researchers also used cost of living through figures from the Community and Economic Research Council plus population concentration, the number of sunny verses cloudy days, and air quality.

Based on these same factors, in a huge endorsement of the Lone Star State, San Antonio and Austin, Texas were ranked as the two least stressful of the 40 metropolitan areas included in the study.

Researchers concluded that the cities ranked uppermost in stressfulness were hit intensely by the recession and heavy unemployment. Sinking home values and increasing foreclosures were also considered to have added significantly to stress levels in these cities. In San Francisco alone, the real-estate market has fallen 43 percent compared to a national median home price dip of 14.7 percent.

Participants in a National Sleep Foundation report, also considered in the study, said that they sleep less because of financial woes. Not only are people sleeping less, but they are trying to re-evaluate their lives and cut down on what are viewed as unnecessary expenses. Over 53 percent of persons surveyed by the Kaiser Family Foundation reported that they had cut down on health care expenses by avoiding doctor visits, skipping checkups, and not refilling prescriptions.

The stress in these cities can sometimes be hard to bear because of the traffic, air pollution, not seeing the sun, growing unemployment, and diminishing home prices. There are many aspects that make these cities stressful, but, when you’re dealing with these circumstances and very expensive living costs, it can be difficult to stay afloat financially.

Most disconcerting, researchers say, are the ill effects of such rampant, intense stress. Excessive stress levels are known to increase patients? risk of high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, obesity, depression, stomach cramping, insomnia, and irritability.

Even worse are the snowballing effects of high stress levels in an entire population. Historically, such collective stress levels have correlated with crime waves, large-scale civil unrest, and pandemic family neglect. Given this trend, researchers advise that these cities take action to reduce population stress levels. City-sponsored exercise programs, time management programs, entertainment, arts programs, or noise reduction programs have been advocated.

This post was written by Diane Johnson. She graduated with a bachelor?s degree from the University of Utah in Political Science. She specializes in writing about online classes, online education, politics, and the economy.

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