Google
 
HelpDepression.com web
| Home  | Site map  | About Us  | Contact Us  | 
Anxiety Disorders Causes Prevention Symptoms Treatment Medications Help Phobias Depression
• Social Anxiety Disorder Social anxiety disorder, involves overwhelming anxiety and excessive self-consciousness in everyday social situations. People with social anxiety disorder have a persistent, intense, and chronic fear of being watched and judged by others and being embarrassed or humiliated by their own actions. While many people with social anxiety disorder recognize that their fear of being around people may be excessive or unreasonable.
• Post traumatic stress disorder Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating condition that can develop following a terrifying event. Often, people with Post-traumatic stress disorder have persistent frightening thoughts and memories of their ordeal and feel emotionally numb, especially with people they were once close to. Post-traumatic stress disorder was first brought to public attention by war veterans, but it can result from any number of traumatic incidents.
More...

Help for Depression, Anxiety and Stress.
Help for all whose lives are touched by depression and anxiety. Learn how to help yourself or someone who has depression more...

Medications for treatment of Depression and Anxiety.
Antidepressant and Antianxiety medications used by people just like you to treat depression, anxiety and stress. more...

Treatment for Anxiety and Depression
Learn about new depression and anxiety treatments. Learn about natural and conventional anxiety and depression treatments more...

Medications for treatment of Depression and Anxiety.
Comprehensive online resource for anxiety and depression medications more...

Specific Phobia

Specific Phobia

A specific phobia is an intense fear of something that poses little or no actual danger. Some of the more common specific phobias are centered around closed-in places, heights, escalators, tunnels, highway driving, water, flying, dogs, and injuries involving blood. Such phobias aren't just extreme fear; they are irrational fear of a particular thing. You may be able to ski the world's tallest mountains with ease but be unable to go above the 5th floor of an office building. While adults with phobias realize that these fears are irrational, they often find that facing, or even thinking about facing, the feared object or situation brings on a panic attack or severe anxiety.

Specific phobias affect an estimated 6.3 million adult Americans1 and are twice as common in women as in men.10 The causes of specific phobias are not well understood, though there is some evidence that these phobias may run in families.11 Specific phobias usually first appear during childhood or adolescence and tend to persist into adulthood.12

If the object of the fear is easy to avoid, people with specific phobias may not feel the need to seek treatment. Sometimes, though, they may make important career or personal decisions to avoid a phobic situation, and if this avoidance is carried to extreme lengths, it can be disabling. Specific phobias are highly treatable with carefully targeted psychotherapy.

Phobias aren't just extreme fears; they are irrational fears. You may be able to ski the world's tallest mountains with ease but feel panic going above the 5th floor of an office building.

Specific Phobia Symptoms

These common conditions are characterized by marked fear of specific objects or situations . Exposure to the object of the phobia, either in real life or via imagination or video, invariably elicits intense anxiety, which may include a (situationally bound) panic attack. Adults generally recognize that this intense fear is irrational. Nevertheless, they typically avoid the phobic stimulus or endure exposure with great difficulty. The most common specific phobias include the following feared stimuli or situations: animals (especially snakes, rodents, birds, and dogs); insects (especially spiders and bees or hornets); heights; elevators; flying; automobile driving; water; storms; and blood or injections.

Approximately 8 percent of the adult population suffers from one or more specific phobias in 1 year (Table 4-1). Much higher rates would be recorded if less rigorous diagnostic requirements for avoidance or functional impairment were employed. Typically, the specific phobias begin in childhood, although there is a second "peak" of onset in the middle 20s of adulthood . Most phobias persist for years or even decades, and relatively few remit spontaneously or without treatment.

The specific phobias generally do not result from exposure to a single traumatic event (i.e., being bitten by a dog or nearly drowning) (Marks, 1969). Rather, there is evidence of phobia in other family members and social or vicarious learning of phobias (Cook & Mineka, 1989). Spontaneous, unexpected panic attacks also appear to play a role in the development of specific phobia, although the particular pattern of avoidance is much more focal and circumscribed.

Source: National Institute of Mental Health

Anxiety
Generalized Anxiety
Obsessive Compulsive
Panic
Post Traumatic Stress
Social Anxiety
Phobias
• Social Phobia Social phobia, also called social anxiety disorder, involves overwhelming anxiety and excessive self-consciousness in everyday social situations. People with social phobia have a persistent, intense, and chronic fear of being watched and judged by others and being embarrassed or humiliated by their own actions. Their fear may be so severe that it interferes with work or school, and other ordinary activities. While many people with social phobia recognize that their fear of being around people may be excessive or unreasonable, they are unable to overcome it.
• Cognitive-Behavioral and Behavioral Therapy Research has shown that a form of psychotherapy that is effective for several anxiety disorders, particularly panic disorder and social phobia, is cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT). The cognitive component helps people change thinking patterns that keep them from overcoming their fears. For example, a person with panic disorder might be helped to see that his or her panic attacks are not really heart attacks as previously feared; Similarly, a person with social phobia might be helped to overcome the belief that others are continually watching and harshly judging him or her.
More...
Copyright © HelpDepression.com All Rights Reserved. Disclaimer  |  Site Map
HelpDepression.com is a part of the Amazing Offers Network