Chapter 5 Anxiety Disorders. Anxiety vs. fear ______ = response to serious, known threat ______ = response to vague sense of threat or danger same physiological.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Anxiety Disorders.
Advertisements

Anxiety and Obsessive-Compulsive Related Disorders
Anxiety Disorders Assessment & Diagnosis SW 593. Introduction  Anxiety disorders are serious medical illnesses that affect approximately 19 million American.
Chapter 18 Section 2 Anxiety Disorders Pages
Chapter 5 - Anxiety Disorders PANIC DISORDER Description - with &without Agoraphobia PD w/o Agora - panic attacks - feeling of imminent death - numerous.
Anxiety Disorders. Anxiety is a part of life –Everyone feels it at one time or the other We fail to make eye contact Avoid talking to someone A disorder.
ANXIETY DISORDERS Source: Copyright © Notice: The materials are copyrighted © and trademarked ™ as the property of The Curriculum Center for Family and.
Anxiety disorders.  Definition  Normal anxiety  Anxiety symptom  Anxiety disorders  generalized anxiety disorder  panic disorder  phobias  obsessive.
PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS ANXIETY & MOOD DISORDERS.
Anxiety Disorders.
A Contemporary Learning Theory Perspective on the Etiology of Anxiety Disorders: Its Not What You Thought It Was Mineka & Zinbarg 2006.
Anxiety Disorders True or False? 1. People who experience a panic attack often think they are having a heart attack. 2. The same drugs used to treat schizophrenia.
Anxiety Disorders Chapter 3.
Nature of Anxiety and Fear  Differences between Anxiety and Fear  Normal Emotional States?  Roller Coaster Ride  Driving on the freeway  Taking a.
Mental Illness Ch. 4.
Module C: Lesson 4.  Anxiety disorders affect 12% of the population.  Many do not seek treatment because:  Consider the symptoms mild or normal. 
Anxiety Disorders: What Are They and How Might We Treat Them? Do You Suffer from Pteronophobia?
Mental Disorders. Each year, roughly 22 percent of the adult U.S. population has a diagnosable mental disorder. In the U.S., half of the people suffering.
Anxiety Disorders and Addiction Thinking Outside the Medications Box.
ANXIETY, OBSESSIVE-COMPULSIVE, AND RELATED DISORDERS Chapter 4.
Generalised Anxiety Disorder, Panic Disorder, Phobias, OCD and PTSD.
Anxiety Disorders Panic attacks Phobias Obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Module 47 Introduction to Psychological Disorders Module 47& 481.
Disorder Review.
ANXIETY DISORDERS. GENERALIZED ANXIETY DISORDER Definition: An anxiety disorder characterized by chronic anxiety, exaggerated worry, and tension, even.
Anxiety, Obsessive-Compulsive, and Related Disorders
Anxiety Disorders WEB. Anxiety as a Normal and an Abnormal Response Some amount of anxiety is “normal” and is associated with optimal levels of functioning.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Anxiety Disorders.
General Anxiety Disorder (GAD) Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) is an anxiety disorder that is characterized by excessive, uncontrollable and often.
Psychological Disorders “Abnormal” Psychology Chapter 18.
Anxiety Disorders Diagnostic criteria and common symptomologies.
PSYCHOPATHOLOGY OF CHILDREN AND FAMILY WEEK 6: ANXIETY DISORDERS.
Anxiety Disorders Symptoms Checklist Presence of symptoms determines the assigning of a diagnosis.
ANXIETY DISORDERS Anxiety vs. Fear  anxiety: (future oriented) negative affect, bodily tension, and apprehension about the future  fear: (reaction.
Elsevier items and derived items © 2010, 2006 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 12 Anxiety and Anxiety Disorders.
Psychological Disorders  Anxiety Disorders: –Generalized Anxiety Disorder –Panic Disorder –Phobic Disorder –Post-traumatic Stress Disorder –Obsessive.
Anxiety Disorders Chapter 4 Nature of Anxiety and Fear Anxiety Future-oriented mood state characterized by marked negative affect Somatic symptoms of.
Anxiety Disorders.
Lesson 1- Anxiety Disorders LECTURE 2: PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS.
Richard P. Halgin Susan Krauss Whitbourne
16.2 Anxiety Disorders Anxiety: a vague, generalized apprehension or feeling that one is in danger. -out of proportion to the situation -most common mental.
Differences mood or emotion? time orientation? physiological response? anxiety vs. fear:
Anxiety Disorders Module 48. What is anxiety? Anxiety is the CNS’s physiological and emotional response to a vague sense of threat or danger. Fear is.
CHAPTER 7 ANXIETY DISORDERS.
Anxiety Disorder. How many people do you think in USA struggle from some sort of an Anxiety disorder? 4 to 6 million people in the United States struggle.
Anxiety Disorders Emily Rojas Period 7.
Anti-anxiety medications Valium Librium Xanax Klonopin Also used for sleeping pills & anti-seizure meds benzodiazepines.
ANXIETY, AND RELATED DISORDERS Chapter 4. ANXIETY AND FEAR ARE NORMAL!! SERVES IMPORTANT ROLES: ADAPTATION, MOTIVATION ANXIETY PREPARES US TO TAKE ACTION.
Chapter 5 Anxiety Disorders. Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 5 2 Fear: Fight-or-Flight Response.
Anxiety Disorders. Exploring Anxiety Disorders People with anxiety disorders… –Feel overwhelming tension, apprehension, or fear when there is no real.
Anxiety Disorders. The Experience of Anxiety  Worry  Fear  Apprehension  Intrusive thoughts  Physical symptoms  Tension  Experience comes more.
Chapter 16 Abnormal Psychology “To study the abnormal is the best way of understand the normal.” -William James.
1 Mental Disorders EQ: How can having a mental disorder harm family relationships?
Chapter 16 Section 2: Anxiety Disorders. Anxiety  General state of dread or uneasiness  Everyone feels anxiety, disorder is out of proportion  Most.
Anxiety Disorders AP Psychology. Anxiety A generalized feeling of apprehension and dread that includes many bodily upsets.
CH.6 & 7 PANIC, PHOBIAS, GAD, PTSD, OCD Anxiety Disorders.
Anxiety Disorders Anxiety Pattern of reactions to a perceived stress Females experience higher rate of anxiety disorders than males Anxiety disorders.
Characteristics of a Disorder  Unjustifiable  Maladaptive  Atypical  Disturbing.
Childhood Anxiety DISORDERS AND TREATMENT. What is Anxiety?  Anxiety - Feeling worried nervous, or uneasy about a certain thing.  Ex: Feeling anxious.
Chapter 5 Anxiety, Trauma, & Stress-Related, & Obsessive-Compulsive-Related Disorders.
PSY 436 Instructor: Emily Bullock Yowell, Ph.D.
Mental Health Nursing-NUR 413 Lecture 8
Anxiety Disorders a group of conditions where the primary symptoms are anxiety or defenses against anxiety. the patient fears something awful will happen.
Anxiety disorders.
Mental Disorders.
Chapter 7 Anxiety Disorders © 2016 Academic Media Solutions.
Mental & Emotional Disorders
Anxiety Disorders.
Anxiety Disorders Chapter 5
Anxiety Disorders.
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 5 Anxiety Disorders

Anxiety vs. fear ______ = response to serious, known threat ______ = response to vague sense of threat or danger same physiological features

Panic Disorder “_________” –periodic, short bouts of panic that occur suddenly, reach a peak, and pass –no REAL threat… Unexpected (_______) Attacks Situationally Bound (______) Attack ______________________

Panic Disorder: –panic attacks repeatedly and unexpectedly and without apparent reason Worry about having an attack; plan Often accompanied by agoraphobia –_______________________ Panic disorder with (or without) agoraphobia

Biological Perspective panic reactions are related to changes in __________________ Inherited biological predisposition? Drug therapies –Antidepressants and some benzodiazepines (_____________) When drug therapy is stopped, symptoms return –(medications + ____________ therapy) - may be most effective

Cognitive-behavioral Perspective (____________) overly sensitive to certain bodily sensations and may misinterpret them (medical catastrophe) –Poor coping skills –Lack of social support –Unpredictable childhoods –Overly-protective parents ____________ response – associate bodily sensations with previous panic responses

Treatments Panic Control Therapy –correct _________________ of their bodily sensations –Relaxation training “______________” procedures to induce panic sensations

Phobias Persistent and unreasonable fears of particular objects, activities, or situations (immediate fear) often avoid the object or thoughts about it

Specific Phobias HematophobiaBlood EphidophobiaSnakes ClaustrophobiaClosed spaces AcrophobiaHeights AerophobiaFlying Death-related phobiaFunerals, corpses, and cemeteries Examples

What Causes Phobias? Behavioral –Conditioning –Modeling (Observation & imitation) –Phobias may develop into GAD _______________ _______________ _____________ Biological –_________________ Species-specific biological predisposition to develop certain fears

Treatments for Specific Phobias Systematic Desensitization –Since relaxation is incompatible with fear, the relaxation response is thought to substitute for the fear response –___________ desensitization ( Live) ; Covert desensitization – (________) Flooding –__________________________ Modeling Graduated Exposure – confront small situations __________ Stopping

Social Phobias Severe, persistent, and unreasonable fears of social or performance situations in which embarrassment may occur Behavioral treatments –______________________________ –social skills & __________________ Cognitive therapies

Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD) excessive anxiety under most circumstances and constant worrying –Vague, intense concerns and fearfulness free-floating” anxiety –“Danger” not a factor –Sleeplessness, irritability, fatigue, muscle tension Symptoms last at least six months

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder ___________ –Persistent thoughts, ideas, impulses, or images ____________ (rituals) –Repeated and rigid behaviors or mental acts performed in order to prevent/reduce anxiety Diagnosis made when symptoms: –_______________________ –cause great distress –consume considerable time –or interfere with daily functions

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Obsessions associated with checking compulsions. Need for ____________________. Obsessions about cleanliness associated with washing compulsions. Hoarding-related behaviors. 4 Major Dimensions

Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder treatment with clomipramine or other serotonin reuptake inhibiting medications, such a fluoxetine (Prozac), is the most effective biological treatment available for OCD. OCD is increasingly being understood as a genetic disorder.

Other approaches to OCD Behavioral Therapy –__________________________ (ERP) repeatedly exposed to anxiety- provoking stimuli and prevented from responding with compulsions Therapists often model the behavior Cognitive perspective –__________________________

TRAUMA serious accident violent victimization life-threatening calamity fires earthquakes riots war abuse witnessing tragedy Photograph copyright © Used with permission.

Stress Disorders Occurs after an event that would be traumatic to anyone ____________________ –Symptoms begin within 4 weeks of event and last for less than 1 month __________________________ –Symptoms can begin at any time following the event but must last for longer than 1 month

Symptoms Depersonalization dissociative amnesia Hypervigilance numbing intense anxiety impairment of everyday functioning

Treatment of Trauma-Induced Disorders Medication “Covering” “Uncovering”

Most studies on obsessions and compulsions indicate that A. obsessions generally occur in the absence of compulsions. B. compulsions generally occur in the absence of obsessions. C. obsessions and compulsions generally occur together. D. there is no relation between obsessions and compulsions.

Rita suffers from a panic disorder. After she begins exercising her heart rate increases. A cognitive theorist would predict that Rita would A. interpret the increased heart rate in a catastrophic way. B. Experience a surge of anxiety after interpreting the heart rate increase as something dangerous. C. Be likely to experience a panic attack if she interprets any additional physical sensations as signs of increasing danger. D. All of the above

Elliot constantly worries about his health, finances, and his marriage. Often, his worries keep him awake at night, causing extreme daytime fatigue. His wife has become frustrated with him because he is so preoccupied with his worries. His likely diagnosis is: A. Panic disorder B. Simple phobia C. Social phobia D. Generalized anxiety disorder