Via Twitter @flowneurosciScience & TechNewsPeople in the UK can now buy a headset to combat depressionUsed in conjunction with a virtual therapist app, the stimulation device manipulates your brain activity with small jolts of electricityShareLink copied ✔️October 31, 2019Science & TechNewsTextBrit Dawson There’s a lot of reasons people in the UK might be depressed: our current political turmoil; the impending climate crisis; the fact that we may have to travel 200 miles for mental health treatment – the list goes on. Now, a use-at-home headset has been launched to help sufferers treat their depression. The device, created by Flow Neuroscience, is Europe’s first brain stimulation technology which uses small jolts of electricity to manipulate activity at the front of the brain. People with depression typically have lower activity in the left side of their prefrontal cortex – involved in personality, decision-making, and regulating emotions – and higher activity on the right, so the headset can be used to rebalance it. Used in conjunction with a virtual therapy app – which encourages users to eat and sleep better, as well as meditate and exercise more – the headset should be worn for 30 minutes, 18 times over six weeks. The device uses transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) to change the electrical potential of neurons – making them more, or less, likely to fire – which has been proven to have similar effects as antidepressants in reducing symptoms, but with less negative side effects. Our headset, now available in the UK, is based on a well-researched brain stimulation technology called Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS). In clinical studies tDCS has been shown to reliably improve symptoms of depression https://t.co/48bhMSKBS8pic.twitter.com/z7yrtRWaDT— Flow Neuroscience (@flowneurosci) August 31, 2019 Many clinics in London’s Harley Street medical district are now offering the headset as an add-on to traditional therapy services. Psychologist and Flow’s CEO, Daniel Mansson, said in a press release: “Integrating the Flow brain stimulation headset with the standard practice of treating mental health is of great benefit to the patient, but also to the clinician who can now provide an effective and accessible option for the treatment of depression.” Mansson also added that the company is “starting talks with the NHS” to make the device available on prescription. This isn’t the first time a headset has been proposed as a potential treatment for mental health issues. In April, new research suggested that virtual reality technology could help alleviate the symptoms of social anxiety. Although the idea of treating depression at home might be welcomed by many, the £399 price tag likely won’t be. With a broken mental health system, and more people turning to counselling apps, it’s obvious more needs to be done to help those in need, though there might still be a long way to go before it’s available at an affordable price. Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORECould the iPhone 15 Pro kill the video game console?Is Atlantis resurfacing? Unpacking the internet’s latest big conspiracyThis new short film embodies the guardian spirit of West Africa Elon Musk’s Neuralink has reportedly killed 1,500 animals in four yearsCould sex for procreation soon be obsolete?Here are all the ways you can spot fake news on TikTokWhy these meme admins locked themselves to Instagram’s HQ Why did this chess-playing robot break a child’s finger?Twitter and Elon Musk are now officially at warAre we heading for a digital amnesia epidemic?Deepfake porn could soon be illegalMeet Oseanworld, the internet artist tearing up the metaverse rulebook