Social Anxiety and Its Treatment

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Social Anxiety and Its Treatment

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Anxiety Disorder diagnosed when anxiety is out of proportion to the danger, is ... pause in speech, umms and ahs - damp armpits - shake/spill drink - wear blusher ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Social Anxiety and Its Treatment


1
Social Anxiety and Its Treatment
  • David M Clark
  • Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London

2
Anxiety and Anxiety Disorders
  • Anxiety is a survival mechanism
  • Motivator and sometimes life saver with real
    dangers
  • Problematic when danger is imagined
  • Anxiety Disorder diagnosed when anxiety is out of
    proportion to the danger, is persistent, and
    disabling. One year prevalence 17
  • Cost 42 billion per year (US, 1990s).

3
Social Phobia(Social Anxiety Disorder)
  • Most common anxiety disorder (12 prevalence)
  • Persistent fear of social or performance
    situations. Individual fears he/she will act in
    a way which will be humiliating or embarrassing.
  • Fear recognised as excessive or unreasonable
  • Feared situations are avoided or endured with
    intense distress

4
Characteristics and Consequences
  • Typically childhood onset (median 13 yrs).
  • Low natural recovery rate (Bruce et al 2005 37
    over 12 years).
  • Increased risk of suicide, alcohol drug abuse,
    depression, other anxiety disorders.
  • Marked under-achievement
  • Low treatment seeking rates

5
Typical Thoughts
  • What I say sounds stupid
  • Im boring
  • I will make a fool of myself
  • They dont like me
  • Theyll see Im anxious
  • I wont have anything to say
  • Ill blush/shake/lose control

6
Existing Treatments
  • Medication
  • MAOI (phenelzine)
  • SSRIs (paroxetine, sertraline, fluvoxamine,
    fluoxetine)
  • (effective in short-term but problematic relapse
    )
  • Psychological
  • Exposure therapy
  • Group cognitive-behavior therapy
  • (effective in short-term gains well-maintained
    )
  • BUT less than 50 recover.

7
Clark Wells (1995)
  • SOCIAL PHOBIA PERSISTS DUE TO
  • shift to internal focus of attention
  • use of internal information to infer how one
    appears to others
  • safety behaviors

8
Social Situation
Activates assumptions
Perceived social danger
Processing of Self as a Social Object
Safety Behaviours
Somatic cognitive symptoms
9
Mansell, Clark Ehlers (2003)
  • Do high socially anxious individuals have an
    internal attentional bias?
  • High vs Low Socially Anxious Students
  • Detect external and internal probes
  • Threat vs No Threat

Source Behaviour Research Therapy, 41, 555-572.
10
External vs Internal Focus of Attention
11
Hackmann, Surawy Clark (1998)
  • Do patients with social phobia experience
    negative, observer perspective images when
    anxious in social situations?
  • Structured interview.
  • Frequency, content perspective of spontaneous
    imagery

12
Negative, distorted, observer perspective images
13
Link between date of memory and onset of social
phobia
14
Wells, Clark, Salkovskis et al (1995)
  • Do safety behaviours prevent cognitive change?
  • Exposure with safety behaviours
  • VS
  • Exposure without safety behaviours

15
Improvement
16
New Cognitive Treatment
  • Derive idiosyncratic version of model
  • Self-focussed attention/safety behaviours
    experiment
  • Video feedback
  • Shift attention to social situation
  • Behavioural Experiments
  • Construct veridical image of social self

17
  • Ill sound stupid
  • Self-Conscious
  • Image of self
  • looking very strange
  • twisted mouth and rigid
  • feel different and apart
  • Safety Behaviours Anxious
  • Delay asking, take deep breaths
    uncomfortable,
  • Speak quickly, mumble, hand over
    sweaty palms,
  • mouth, rehearse what about stiff
    muscles,
  • to say, check memory for what mind goes
    blank,
  • I have just said

18
New Cognitive Treatment
  • Derive idiosyncratic model
  • Self-focussed attention/safety behaviours
    experiment
  • Video feedback
  • Shift attention to social situation
  • Behavioural Experiments
  • Construct veridical image of social self

19
Attention and Safety Behaviours Experiment
  • Difficult social interaction (twice)
  • Focus on self safety behaviours
  • versus
  • Focus externally no safety behaviours
  • Compare subjective anxiety, catastrophes,
    performance

20
Video and Audio Feedback
  • shows true observable self
  • but can continue to process internal information
    or discount accuracy of image
  • therefore run mental video first and
    operationalise conspicuousness of negative
    behaviours
  • can help patient drop safety behaviours by
    showing they are more observable than feared
    symptoms

21
New Cognitive Treatment
  • Derive idiosyncratic model
  • Self-focussed attention/safety behaviors
    experiment
  • Video feedback
  • Shift attention to social situation
  • Behavioral Experiments
  • Construct veridical image of social self

22
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23
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24
  • Interrogating the Social Environment
  • Behave in unacceptable fashion and observe
    others response (WIDEN BANDWIDTH)
  • - pause in speech, umms and ahs
  • - damp armpits
  • - shake/spill drink
  • - wear blusher
  • - disagree/express opinion
  • - ignore acquaintance
  • 2. Conduct surveys
  • 3. Articulate and discount imaginary critic

25
Social Phobia Trial 1(Clark, Ehlers et al, J.
Consult. Clin. Psychol. 2003, 71, 1058-1067)
26
Social Phobia Trial 2 (Clark, Ehlers et al. in
press)
27
Trial 3 (Mortberg, Clark et al. in
press)Stockholm
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