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Chronic stress: the hidden epidemic reshaping lives

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March 18, 2026

IN SOUTH Africa, a country already grappling with financial uncertainty, high crime rates and relentless workplace pressures, stress is not just an occasional inconvenience; it is an epidemic.

- VUYILE MADWANTSI

Chronic stress: the hidden epidemic reshaping lives

THE brain can grow stronger or weaker depending on how we treat it. | Meta AI

According to an Ipsos survey, over half the workforce has taken time off due to stress, far surpassing the global average. Burnout is surging, and more than a quarter of South Africans face moderate to severe depression. But the true toll of this crisis may be hidden in plain sight: chronic stress is reshaping our brains, with far-reaching implications for mental and physical health.

Neuroscience reveals that our brain is a living, adaptable organ, shaped by our experiences, habits and environments.

Much like muscles or lungs, the brain can grow stronger or weaker depending on how we treat it. Chronic stress, especially from the workplace, has emerged as one of the most damaging forces to our brains, reshaping their very structure and function.

Mounting evidence shows that ongoing stress in our jobs does not just make us feel overwhelmed; it rewires the brain in ways that can be harmful.

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