Panic Attack Treatment: 2 Proven Techniques + 5 Must-Know Facts (New Research)


In today’s video I’m going to share with you 5 essential, little-known scientific-facts and insights that you absolutely must know about, if you want to quickly and effectively treat your panic attacks. I’m also going to give you 2 unique, counterintuitive techniques, that have BOTH been scientifically proven to help treat anxiety and to treat panic disorder — so you can use these techniques to make a significant, positive difference in your life, today. Hi, I’m Michael Norman, and as scientist and paid-on-results anxiety specialist with clients from over 103 countries around the world, I’ve witnessed first hand how panic attacks and panic disorder, have impacted the lives of even the strongest, bravest people.


Whether someone’s a celebrity, a highly-respected doctor, a CEO, whether they’re a student, a stay at home mum, or anyone else, panic doesn’t discriminate. Almost 1 in 3 people will experience a panic attack in their life-time, and I’ve been through it too. Thankfully though, there’s some good news to this story, because thanks to the last 3 decades of scientific research, panic is now one of most treatable issues there is, if you get the right scientifically grounded help, and that’s what this video is all about. Now, years ago Albert Einstein wisely pointed out: “If I were given one hour to save the world, I would spend 59 minutes defining the problem and one minute solving it.” This is especially true when it comes to successfully treating the panic attacks you’ve had, because, as you’ll soon discover for yourself, once you have an accurate understanding of what’s been happening to you, how panic really works, and what’s been keeping it in your life, surprisingly, the solution suddenly becomes much clearer, as does the path back to a normal, panic-free life.


So with all of this in mind, let’s move onto the first counterintuitive fact, FACT 1: The Term “Panic Attack” Is Not Only Completely Misleading, It Can Actually Make It More Difficult To Recover. Words carry a lot of power. They can mislead us, they can deceive us, they can send us in the wrong direction, down the wrong path, or they can illuminate deeper truths, show us where to go, and help us to find our way home. And knowing this is true, I hope it’s obvious why I consider it so very important, that you know, that a panic attack is absolutely NOT an “attack”. That phrase is totally misleading, and as you’ll understand before you finish this video, it can create a mindset that make things much worse, making it much harder to successfully treat panic.


If we really care about solving your problem once and for all, then, obviously, we really care about the truth, and the overwhelming scientific evidence is that every panic attack you’ve ever had, was not an attack at all, but surprisingly, it was just an innocent, very well-intended, over-protective MISTAKE. To explain this more, I’m going to share with you a short clip from my “Panic Free TV Foundation” video series, which presents a simple but important thought-experiment, Which of these two smoke alarms would you prefer to have protecting you in your home? Would you prefer to have smoke alarm that sometimes FAILS to go off, and stays silent, even though there’s a deadly fire in your house? Or, would you prefer to have a smoke alarm that never misses a real fire, but occasionally goes off when you burn the toast, even though there is no danger, and everything is actually fine? Now of course, we’d all prefer to have a perfect smoke alarm system, that never make any mistakes — but the reality is, we live in complex and often ambiguous world.


And so if you had to choose between one of these two options, what would you chose? An under-sensitive smoke alarm that could miss a real fire and kill you? Or an over-sensitive smoke alarm that occasionally has unpleasant, noisy false alarms, but never misses a real fire, and always keeps you safe? It’s a simple answer, isn’t it. When it comes to our survival, to our LIFE, it’s better to have an alarm system that errs on the side of safety, even if that means, we sometimes get false alarms. So what does this have to do with panic? Well, "panic attacks" are nothing more than false alarms of our over-protective, life-saving fear systems. And while it probably hasn’t felt that way for you in the past, the truth is that a panic "attack" is just a terrifying, overwhelming, over-protective MISTAKE. It’s a mistake, that ironically, is motivated by your brain’s #1 priority in life — to keep you safe. Panic attacks are our brain and body, following the same “better safe than sorry” philosophy, that every good smoke detector system uses.


And it’s far healthier, in fact it’s optimal, to have a fear system that is biased to be over-sensitive and to occasionally give us false alarms, than it is to have an under-sensitive system, that could miss real danger, that could kill us. So a panic attack is JUST an over-protective mistake. The only real problem, and it’s a big one, is that it’s a terrifying mistake. It’s a mistake that can leave us feeling exposed, vulnerable, and unsafe. Even though no one dies from a panic attack, and even though panic could never ever make anyone truly go crazy, the false alarm of a panic attack often creates a very powerful ILLUSION, that these things could happen. And that’s why I really believe, that you are incredibly, So again, a panic attack is NOT an “attack”. Instead, it’s a false alarm. It’s a mistaken effort to protect you, from a danger that’s not there.


Unfortunately, the reason why it’s so scary, the reason why it’s one of the most horrible experiences anyone could ever go through, is because a false alarm sounds the same as a real alarm. And with a panic false alarm, because we so often don’t know what’s going on, the confusion and uncertainty can make everything even more alarming. And that’s why it’s so very important you know about fact #2. Believe it or not, all the strange and scary symptoms you’ve had because of panic, especially the ones that seem the most dangerous, all they really are, are just harmless byproducts, of a false alarm. Fortunately, thanks to a lot of research, we know how a false alarm alone, can create them, We know they can’t kill you, We know they can’t make you truly go crazy, And we know that, reassuringly, as you learn about this, it can help you immediately feel safer and more secure.


Now, since we have a lot to cover in this video, I’m not going to go into the details here, even though this is a very important topic. Since I cover this in depth in my free “Panic Free TV Foundation Series”, if you want to learn more, as I recommend you do, then you’ll find what you’re looking for when you get to episode 2 of my Foundation Series. Again, my it’s completely free, at least at the moment, so you can watch it by visiting www.PanicFree.TV, or by clicking YouTube information icon in the top right hand corner of this video. Okay let’s move on to, FACT 3: There is the core, hidden pattern behind every panic false alarm you’ve ever had , and as you’ll soon see, this pattern reveals to us, the fastest, most effective, most direct path, back to a normal, panic-free life. If you’ve ever been told that you have panic disorder, even though I’m not at all a fan of that label at all, this is the core pattern we want to shift together, so that you can finally be 100% panic-free.


To explain more, here’s another short clip from my foundation series, A panic attack happens when anxiety creates body sensations and anxious thoughts, And, because our brain has mistakenly learnt to fear those body sensations or thoughts, it creates even more anxiety. That increased anxiety then creates even MORE body sensations and thoughts, and around the cycle people go. I call this The Panic Pattern, because it’s THE pattern behind every scary false alarm. It’s a HARMLESS vicious cycle, that can escalate, into a full fight/flight response. So, let me share with you one of the most common examples of this pattern, because it helps illustrate this, more clearly. Since anxiety makes everyone’s heart beat a little faster, if something happens in our lives that makes us fearful or anxious enough, naturally our heart will speed up.


Again, this is a completely natural and healthy response that we all have. But if someone is scared of that, if they’re scared of having a faster heart beat, then anytime they get anxious enough, for whatever reason, it can trigger The Panic Pattern. Anxiety would make their heart beat faster, and a faster heart beat would make them more anxious, which would further increases their heart beat, and a harmless, but scary vicious cycle, would ensue. This is the core pattern behind every panic false alarm. And it can work if people fear a faster heart beat, or any other anxiety-related body sensation, that they happen to be scared of. Again, a panic false alarm happens when anxiety creates body sensations and anxious thoughts, and, because our brain has mistakenly learnt to fear those body sensations and thoughts, that creates even more anxiety.


And that increased anxiety then creates even MORE body sensations and thoughts, and around the cycle we go. Now you might be asking: what’s the deal with panic that’s triggered by external situations — like driving, or flying, shopping, leaving the house, or other things? Why does that happen? Well, if it happens, it’s because those external situations have become associated with anxiety, and so they feed right into The Panic Pattern. Anything that triggers enough anxiety to create a feared body sensation, can trigger the whole vicious cycle, and therefore a panic attack. Now, there are several reasons why understanding “The Panic Pattern” is so important — the most important by far, is that it reveals to us the fastest, most effective, most direct path, back to a normal, panic-free life.


I’ll talk about this more in just a moment, but first, it’s essential we cover fact #4 Following commonsense tends to backfire, keeps people stuck, and reinforces The Panic Pattern If you’ve struggled to find the answers you need, then please know, it’s definitely NOT your fault. Even though panic is one of the most treatable issues there is, unfortunately it’s also one of the most counterintuitive. What seems as if it SHOULD work with panic DOESN’T.


And what DOES work tends to fly in the face of commonsense. There are several important examples of this, but for now, in this video, I’m just going to mention one very, very briefly, And that example of how commonsense tends to backfire with panic, is trying to fight it Trying to stop, suppress, or fight back against panic is one of the most natural responses in the world. Any sensible, intelligent person would try to do it, But unfortunately, as a huge amount of research shows, when it comes to panic what we resist doesn’t just persist, unfortunately, it often becomes stronger, more resilient, and more enduring.


When we try and fight panic, it typically leads to more intense, more enduring panic-related body-sensations and thoughts, not less. In the short-term this fuels to “The Panic Pattern”, and in the long-term it increases the chance of further, frequent, ongoing false alarms. While I explain this in depth in my foundation series, I hope you can now appreciate yet another reason why I am definitely not a fan of the term “panic attack”. When people are mislead into believing that panic is an “attack”, or a “trick”, or a “monster”, or any other unhelpful, conflict based metaphor, then it’s only natural that they’d try and fight it, which unfortunately doesn’t only NOT help, it actively makes the situation worse. Believe it or not, even doing absolutely NOTHING, is a far more effective strategy than trying to fight panic, and if that statement seem a little crazy to you, then consider that doing essentially nothing, was a key part of a pioneering approach to panic, developed my compatriot Claire Weekes, more than 60 years old. STRATEGY #1 Weekes was an Australian doctor, and she was the pioneer of acceptance-based approaches for panic and anxiety, which are so common today.


She urged people not to try and fight panic, but instead, to utterly accept it, to “float” through it, to use her words, and to let time pass, until it goes away. How could this be helpful? Well, if we go back to the scene I you showed earlier in this video, with burning toast, when we try to fight a false alarm, it’s like pushing that toast back into the toaster, and turning that toaster up.


Even though it’s still just burning toast, it leads to much more smoke, and as a result, a much longer false alarm. However, when we utterly accept a false alarm, it’s like turning that toaster off. Even though the smoke may linger for a while, if you let time pass as Weekes used to say, the smoke WILL clear, and things will more quickly return to normal. Now, obviously, I’ll well aware that trying to accept a false alarm is far, far easier said than done — and this is why acceptance-based approaches take time and practice to work.


Weekes was very honest about this, and she urged people to be realistic, so they would stick with the process, even through setbacks. In her own words, if you use an acceptance-based approach, “don’t count the days, don’t count the months, let time pass” Because, “even with compete acceptance, it takes about 2 months to desensitise the body” While this has been shown to be true for all acceptance-based approaches scientifically studied, even though acceptance is a slow process, it does help, if people stick with it. And for the 1960’s accepting panic and anxiety was a revolutionary idea, which helped hundreds of thousands of people, who way back, at that point in history, had little else that worked. Now, since were covering such an important topic here, that of NOT fighting panic, I want to share a second, even more useful strategy, one that you can use to actually stop a false alarm, if you have one. This is strategy #2 Now, before I share this strategy with you, I need to warn you upfront, that when I explain it you, you’ll probably think it’s totally crazy.


That’s totally ok, but also keep in mind that we know from research, that this counterintuitive strategy is more effective than many of the most commonly used approaches to treating panic. It’s is more effective than breathing exercises. It’s more effective than relaxation techniques. And it’s more effective than cognitive approaches — where someone tries to use logic to dismiss, talk back to, or “correct” anxious thoughts. What’s this “crazy” strategy that can actually help? It’s using a paradoxical approach where, if you get a false alarm, instead of trying to fight it, you VOLUNTARILY try to make it stronger and last longer. Now, how could such a “crazy” approach ever work? Well there are several reasons beyond the scope of this video, but to give you just one reason here, I’d like you to consider this: Have you ever tried to force yourself to fall asleep, but as a result, you found yourself being more awake? Have you ever tried so hard to forget something, that you ending up thinking about it even more? Or have you’ve ever tried to force yourself to be attracted to someone you didn’t have ANY feelings for, and, as a consequence, you became even more aware that person wasn’t right for you.


If you’ve ever had one of these experiences, then you might appreciate that, when we try to force an involuntary, automatic, mental or emotional process, sometimes all that effort backfires, and it inhibits that very process. This is something we can use to our advantage with panic, and it’s why, when I first meet a new client, if they’re having a false alarm because they’ve left their comfort zone even to talk to me, I never ask them to relax. Instead, very often, I ask them to voluntarily make the false alarm a LOT bigger. I ask them to voluntarily give me the biggest false alarm they’ve ever had. And what happens universally, is they can’t. Paradoxically, it relaxes them.


Now, obviously, when I work with clients 1-on-1 there is a unique art and skill to making sure this works optimally for each individual, but the use of paradoxical approaches like this, isn’t something I invented. Famous therapists like Alfred Adler, Victor Frankl and Milton Erickson, as far back as 90 to 100 years ago, EACH independently discovered that instead of trying to fight with a problem, sometimes you get far better results by, paradoxically, trying to encouraging it. When done correctly, even with self-application, even in a basic form as I’m sharing with you here, this approach has been shown to be a useful first step for helping people with panic — one that, again, is more effective than breathing exercises, more effective than relaxation techniques, and more effective than trying to use logic to debate, talk-back to, or change anxious thoughts. Again, the approach is, if you get a false alarm, instead of trying to fight it, you voluntarily try as hard as you can to FORCE IT, trying with all your willpower, to compel it to become the biggest, longest lasting false alarm you’ve ever had, as fast as it can.


Now, as useful as this approach can be as a first step, obviously it’s just that, a first step. It’s a tool to help people realise that panic doesn’t work the way you think it does, and that, paradoxically, you can get much more control when you don’t follow commonsense. Now, I want to shift mindsets and very briefly introduce you to a totally different orientation to treating panic. Because, obviously, as nice as it is to have ways to accept, cope with, or even stop a false alarm after it happens, obviously, approaches like that are highly reactive. You have to remember what to do, You have to be able to consciously apply that strategy in the heat of the moment, which often isn’t easy, And worst of all, even if you have a really good technique that works, you’ve still had to go through the unpleasant experience of having your day interrupted by a false alarm Obviously, none of that is optimal at all. So what’s the solution? Well, I’m sure you’ve heard the old saying that prevention is better than cure, and obviously, what’s far more useful and far more effective, is if we can help you automatically prevent future false alarms, so they never even happen in the first place.


Because, for me, “Panic Free" is NOT about coping better with false alarms, because if you have to cope with or accept false alarms, that means you still get them. “Panic Free” doesn’t even mean that you’re able to immediately stop a false alarm, as soon as it begins — because, at best, that's just a good start. What "Panic Free" really means is that panic has truly become a total non-issue for you, in your life. It means you're naturally and effortlessly, as panic-free, care-free and “normal”, as anyone else you know, without you having to even think about it. And what’s the fastest, most effective way to help you reach the point where you’re truly panic free? Well that leads us into fact #5 FACT 5: We Can Automatically Prevent Future False Alarms, By Quickly Ending “The Panic Pattern” Whether you’ve had just a few false alarms so far, whether you’ve had them for years or even decades, or whether you’ve been diagnosed as having panic disorder, if we can change your automatic responses so that instead of feeling anxious you’re AUTOMATICALLY calm, relaxed, and secure in response to the very triggers that triggered “The Panic Pattern” for you in the past, then there can’t be a vicious cycle, and you won’t be able to panic.


This is the focus of all my work, and obviously, if you like this video and you want more of my help, then obviously I have so much more to share with you. While you’ll notice I have a range of resources on my website, including ways you can work with me personally, I recommend you start first with my free foundation series, which goes into everything we’ve talked about here, plus a lot more, in much more detail. Again, my foundation series is totally free at the moment, and you can watch the first episode in full right now by clicking the link in the description, by visiting my website at www.panicfree.tv, or by clicking the information icon in the top right hand corner of this video. Thousands of people, from all walks of life, have gone through my foundation series, and since so many of them have openly said that it’s made a real, positive difference in their lives, I think you’ll discover too, when you watch it for yourself, that it also makes a real, positive difference for you.


I hope this video has obviously been helpful for you, and if it has then please leave me a comment below, so that I know, you’d like me to make more videos, like this video here on YouTube. Also, if you’d like be immediately notified as soon as I publish new, helpful videos, like this video here, then obviously subscribe to my YouTube channel and automatically, this will happen. Remember, panic is one of the most treatable issues there is, if you get the right scientifically grounded help. You are not alone, and not matter what you’ve been through, there’s so much we can do to help make an immediate positive difference in your life. Thank you so much for watching. I hope again that this video was incredibly useful for you. I’m Michael Norman, and this has been another episode of Panic Free TV.



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5 PANIC ATTACK MYTHS | Kati Morton


Hey everybody! Today we're gonna be talking about the five myths of panic attacks. So let's get into them. *intro music* Now the first myth is that they're caused by stress and anxiety. If you yourself have ever suffered with a panic attack you know that they come out of nowhere we don't even know what necessarily triggers us, something may not even trigger us. It's not necessarily something that environmental or something that's occurring right now. Panic attacks honestly happen because our system gets overwhelmed and overloaded and sends us into a fight or flight response, AKA, a panic! I also don't like this myth because it implies that we have control over it like we can stop our panic attacks if we just change our environment and the truth is the panic attacks will happen in a wide variety of places for a wide variety of reasons those of which we aren't even privy too.


We don't even know why they happen. And the second myth is that they're going to make us go crazy. Panic attacks, if they happen for too long we're just gonna go insane. I've heard a lot of my clients say this, that it feels like they're losing their mind and they wonder if it can cause other mental illnesses to occur and the truth is the panic attacks usually happen because we have some underlying mental illness, whether it be another anxiety disorder or depressive disorder, any kind of mood disorder can be a lot of different components that can lead us to having panic attacks and being more predisposed for panic.


The truth is that panic attacks in no way affect the functioning of our brain as a whole in the hormones, like dopamine, norepinephrine or any kind of neurotransmitter that could cause another mental illness or psychosis or quote, unquote, make us go crazy. The third myth about panic attacks is that having a severe one is going to cause us to go into cardiac arrest. I've heard from a lot of my clients that because a racing heart is one of the symptoms that they experience most with panic attacks, or even the build-up to a panic attack, they'll start feeling their heart race and they worry that if they're in a really extreme or intense panic attack for a sustained period of time, let's say for an hour, that they're going to go into cardiac arrest and this is going to be how they're going to die and it sends them into panic even more quickly and keeps them there longer.


But the truth is and this is something important to kind of note and to tell yourself, maybe when you're, you feel those symptoms happening is that our heart is extremely strong it can beat at over 200 beats per minute for days, if not weeks especially if we're young, it can be four weeks at that rate without sustaining any damage. I just want to take a second to let that sink in. We can essentially be in panic for a really really long period of time without our heart ever being hurt or even potentially considering it going into cardiac arrest or having any kind of malfunction.


Therefore on average, panic attacks last from three to ten minutes so a three to ten minute panic attack is not in any way going to harm your heart or cause a heart attack. The fourth myth is that they're used as a way to get out of something we just don't want to do. Uh, if we hear that one more time. Am I right? For those of you who don't understand what a panic attack is or what can cause a panic attack, like I stated earlier, they come out of nowhere. They are not triggered by our environment, it's not due to an over reaction by up if usually a result of another underlying mental illness and these feel like they come out of nowhere, happen quickly and can stay and they're extremely uncomfortable, so if you found yourself having these attacks anytime you went into the grocery store, then you would start to not want to go to the grocery store or whenever you're in a crowded place, like I've had a lot of clients are like, "If I'm ever in a busy thing like a club or a concert or even like a really busy day at the mall," they've had panic attacks, we don't really know why but they're then attaching busyness and a lot of people with panic attacks therefore if someone's going to call you, if a friends going to ask you to go out to a party, and you think it's going to be a small group you're like sure, then later you find out there's going to be like 50 people there, you're like I'm gonna have to say no.



But we need to understand that panic attacks and panic disorder is a real diagnosable mental illness and because we don't know what triggers them and they come out of nowhere we fear the next one may be just around the corner. So of course we're going to limit the amount of things that we do until we can get them more under control. And the fifth and final myth about panic attacks is that there is nothing that we can do to treat them. Meeh. That's wrong, there are a lot of things we can do to treat them. Yay! Number one, and something that I've been reading because if any of you follow me or have been on the live streams or follow me on snapchat or Instagram, I have been working very hard at your anxiety workbook and I'm super excited for it to come out, but the thing that I learned through all the research I've been doing, is that progressive relaxation, you know like clench your feet, relax your feet, clench your calves, relax your calves, that type of exercise, doing that 20 to 30 minutes a day can calm our system down to such an amount that those who struggle with panic disorder may rarely, if never again, if they continue to do the progressive relaxation each day, they may never have the symptoms again.


They're still doing more studies on it but progressive relaxation is, surprising to me, but it's so amazing and been so helpful and beneficial. And the other is that CBT, so cognitive behavioral therapy, is also helpful with panic disorder and those of us who struggle with panic attacks because a lot of times we build up the panic and our system's fight-or-flight response by worrying about all of those things like it's going to cause a heart attack, I'm going to be super embarrassed, I'm going to go crazy, I may fall over or faint, all those worries and kind of falsely held beliefs that we have, CBT can really help us challenge those.


Also medications have been shown to be extremely beneficial SSRIs, SNRIs, and benzodiazepine have been shown to be extremely helpful for those of us who struggle with panic disorder and I know that not all of you are interested in taking medication this is another option that's available and if you're out there and you're struggling with panic attacks and you feel like they're happening with more frequency, it's controlling the way you live your life please reach out, please talk to someone. There are different professionals and a ton of help available, we just have to ask for it and we just have to reach out and I know it's scary to do the first reach out, but know that we're used to managing it we can handle it. We are kind, calm, wonderful people and maybe bring an extra supportive person with you to that first appointment or maybe they make the call and set up the appointment for you.


Find ways, use your resources to get the support and help that you need. Please share this video, I think a lot of people talk poorly about panic attacks or don't understand and I also put some in here, if you didn't notice for those of us who struggle and the myths that we tell ourselves about panic attack because I think both are really important to note, and leave in the comments what are some myths that you've heard. What is the way that you talk back to that, so that we have as a community are raising the stigma associated with mental health. I love you all and I will see you next time. Bye!.



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Oxford Handbook of Psychiatry

The Oxford Handbook of Psychiatry is directed at medical students, doctors coming to psychiatry for the first time, psychiatric trainees, and other professionals who may have to deal with patients with psychiatric problems. It is written by a group of experienced psychiatrists and is designed to provide easy access to the information required by psychiatry trainees on the wards or on-call. It closely follows the familiar format of the other Oxford Handbooks, andprovides coverage that is comprehensive, evidence based and practical. The content of the handbook is written in the concise, note-based style characteristic of the series, with single topics confined to single pages.

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Don’t Let Fear of Suffering Limit Your Possibility – Sadhguru

Most humans, Sadhguru says, never walk full stride, but take only half-steps due to the fear of suffering. If you go against the natural aspiration to be as much as you can be simply out of fear, then the immense possibility of being human is lost. He discusses inner management and how to handle thoughts and emotions. Tamil version – https://youtu.be/abb28UvTxQk **************************************** Download Sadhguru App 📲 http://onelink.to/sadhguru__app Yogi, mystic and visionary, Sadhguru is a spiritual master with a difference. An arresting blend of profundity and pragmatism, his life and work serves as a reminder that yoga is a contemporary science, vitally relevant to our times. More Videos & Blogs on Website http://www.isha.sadhguru.org Subscribe to our channel here: https://www.youtube.com/user/sadhguru?sub_confirmation=1 Free Guided Meditation by Sadhguru at http://www.ishafoundation.org/Ishakriya Free Yoga Tools For Transformation at http://isha.sadhguru.org/5-min-practices/ Official Facebook Page of Sadhguru https://www.facebook.com/sadhguru Official Twitter Profile of Sadhguru

Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Dummies

“We all have aspects of ourselves that we would like to change, but many of us believe that a leopard can’t change its spots – if that’s you, stop there! Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Dummies will help identify unhealthy modes of thinking – such as “a leopard can’t change it’s spots”! – that have been holding you back from the changes you want. CBT can help whether you’re seeking to overcome anxiety and depression, boost self-esteem, lose weight, beat addiction or simply improve your outlook in your professional and personal life.”

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Descriptive Psychopathology

In order to accurately describe and diagnose psychiatric illness, practitioners require in-depth knowledge of the signs and symptoms of behavioral disorders. Descriptive Psychopathology provides a broad review of the psychopathology of psychiatric illness, beyond the limitations of the DSM and ICD criteria. Beginning with a discussion of the background to psychiatric classification, the authors explore the problems and limitations of current diagnostic systems. The following chapters then present the principles of psychiatric examination and diagnosis, described with accompanying patient vignettes and summary tables, and related to different diagnostic concerns. A thought-provoking conclusion proposes a restructuring of psychiatric classification based on the psychopathology literature and its validating data. Written for psychiatry and neurology residents, clinical psychologists, behavioral neurologists, clinical psychology students and psychiatric nurse practitioners, it is invaluable to anyone who accepts the responsibility for the care of patients with behavioral syndromes.

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Neurosis in Society

Neurosis in Society

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6 Common Causes of Anxiety

According to a recent survey by the National Institute of Mental Health (2017), Anxiety is the most common mental illness, with over 40 million adults in the US alone being diagnosed every year. The American Psychological Association (2013) defines anxiety as a future-oriented concern that may lead people to avoid situations that trigger or worsen their distress. Do you have experience with anxiety? Do you know someone who is often anxious? What other symptoms of anxiety do you recognize? There are in fact many types of anxiety disorders, including generalized anxiety disorder, Obsessive-compulsive Disorder (OCD), Panic Disorder, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Social Phobia or Social Anxiety Disorder. You can watch the video here: https://youtu.be/IzaNQAh3NiY #anxiety #anxietydisorders Credits Script Writer: Chloe Avanasa Script Editors: Kelly Soong VO: Amanda Silvera Animator: Napiart YouTube Manager: Cindy Cheong Our sources: National Institute of Mental Health. (November 2017). What Are Anxiety Disorders?. Retrieved from nimh.nih.gov/health/statistics/any-anxiety-disorder.shtml Nolen-Hoeksema, S. (2000). The role of rumination in depressive disorders and mixed anxiety/depressive symptoms. Journal of abnormal psychology, 109(3), 504. Laux, L., & Krohne, H. W. (Eds.). (1982). Achievement, stress, and anxiety. Hemisphere Publishing Corporation. Caplan, S. E. (2006). Relations among loneliness, social anxiety, and problematic Internet use. CyberPsychology & behavior, 10(2), 234-242. Stearns, P. N. (2012). American fear: The causes and consequences of high anxiety. Routledge. Greenson, R. R. (1959). Phobia, anxiety, and depression. Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 7(4), 663-674. Reiss, S. (1991). Expectancy model of fear, anxiety, and panic. Clinical psychology review, 11(2), 141-153. Kinsey, S. G., Bailey, M. T., Sheridan, J. F., Padgett, D. A., & Avitsur, R. (2007). Repeated social defeat causes increased anxiety-like behavior and alters splenocyte function in C57BL/6 and CD-1 mice. Brain, behavior, and immunity, 21(4), 458-466.