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Phobia

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Title: Phobia


1
Phobia
  • The word phobia is Greek, therefore any word that
    is connected to it should be Greek.
  • But, Latin suppletion affixed to the Greek stem
    is common
  • From www.phobialist.com/phobia_names.htm

2
Three Categories
  • Modern Psychiatry identifies three different
    types of phobias
  • Agoraphobia
  • Social phobia
  • Specific phobia

3
Pathophysiology
  • Sympathetic nervous system activation is common
    in the phobic disorders, resulting in elevations
    in heart rate and blood pressure, as well as
    symptoms such as tremor, palpitations, sweating,
    dyspnea, dizziness, and/or paresthesias..

4
  • Cognitive distortions, such as fear of scrutiny
    by others or fear that one is trapped without
    escape, also are common

5
  • Collectively, these disorders are the most
    common forms of psychiatric illness, surpassing
    rates of mood disorders and substance abuse.
    Anxiety linked to a specific object or situation
    is the most common subtype. Severity can range
    from mild and unobtrusive to severe and can
    result in incapacity to work, travel, or interact
    with others.

6
Agoraphobia
  • Irrational anxiety about being in places from
    which
  • escape might be difficult or embarrassing.
  • (Fear of outdoors, fear of everything)
  • with panic attacks without panic attacks

7
Social phobia
  • Irrational anxiety elicited by exposure to
  • certain types of social or performance
  • situations, also leading to avoidance behavior.
  • Most frequent fear reported by Americans is
    Public Speaking

8
Specific phobia
  • Persistent and irrational fear in the presence
  • of some specific stimulus which
  • commonly elicits avoidance of that
  • stimulus, i.e., withdrawal.

9
Specific Phobia Sub Types
  • animal type - cued by animals or insects
  • natural environment type - cued by objects in the
    environment, such as storms, heights, or water
  • blood-injection-injury type - cued by witnessing
    some invasive medical procedure
  • situational type - cued by a specific situation,
    such as public transportation, tunnels, bridges,
    elevators, flying, driving, or enclosed spaces
  • other type - cued by other stimuli than the
    above, such as of choking, vomiting, or
    contracting an illness

10
Emotion and Behaivor
  • Fear alone does not distinguish a phobia
  • both fear and avoidance must be evident.

11
Causes -- Explanations
  • The Freudians might think that as young children
    agoraphobics feared abandonment by a cold,
    withholding mother and the fear has generalized
    to a fear of abandonment or helplessness
  • (bit of a reach dont ya think)

12
Conscious Experience
  • modern learning theory suggests that agoraphobia
    may develop because people avoid situations they
    have found painful or embarrassing learning
    from negative reinforcement Phobia includes
    avoidance

13
Direct Experience?
  • However almost half of all people with phobias
    have never had a painful experience with the
    object they fear ???
  • Perhaps we hear that someone has been injured by
    a snake, for example, and we become afraid too.

14
What about this?
  • . . . And, almost no one is afraid of cars,
  • even though almost everyone has experienced or
    witnessed a car accident in which someone got
    injured.

15
Evolution and Genes
  • Are we inherently "prepared" to learn certain
    phobias?
  • For millions of years people who quickly learned
    to avoid snakes, heights, and lightning probably
    have had a good chance to survive and to transmit
    their genes.
  • We have not had enough time to evolve a tendency
    to fear cars and other modern, dangerous things.

16
Possible explanations
  • Another suggestion is that people generally
    develop phobias for objects they cannot predict
    or control.
  • Danger is more stressful when it takes us by
    surprise

17
  • Humans seem biologically prepared to acquire
    fears of certain animals and situations that were
    important survival threats in evolutionary
    history
  • People also seem predisposed to develop phobias
    toward creatures that arouse disgust, like
    spiders, slugs, maggots, rats, or cockroaches

18
  • Neuroscientists are finding that biological
    factors, such as greater blood flow and
    metabolism in the right side of the brain may
    also be involved in phobias.
  • Identical twins reared apart sometimes develop
    the same phobias one pair independently becoming
    claustrophobic, for example

19
  • Cross-cultural psychologists point out that
    phobias are influenced by cultural factors.
  • Agoraphobia is much more common in the United
    States and Europe than in other areas of the
    world

20
Bee Bit Phobia
  • Little girl Learned bee phobia from her mother
  • High emotional imitation learning

21
Agoraphobia
  • Two common meanings
  • Fear of crowds or situations where escape
  • is difficult
  • Fear of the out doors or fear of everything

22
Agoraphobia
  • House Bound
  • Panic attack leads to decreased activity and
    ultimately to never leaving home
  • Agoraphobia secondary to Panic Attack

23
Agoraphobia
  • Other cases where activity decreases gradually
  • as fear increases, or as more and more situations
    evoke fear and avoidance
  • Some of these fears can be similar to Social
    Phobia

24
Social Phobia
  • Very common
  • Several forms
  • Irrational anxiety elicited by exposure to
    certain types of social or performance situations

25
Social Phobia
  • is an intense fear of becoming humiliated in
    social situations, specifically of embarrassing
    yourself in front of other people.

26
Genetic ?
  • It often runs in families and may be accompanied
    by depression or alcoholism.
  • Social phobia often begins around early
    adolescence or even younger.
  • (Anxious families)

27
Self image
  • People with social phobia tend to think that
    other people are very competent in public and
    that they not.

28
Can be very specific
  • giving a speech,
  • talking to a boss or other authority figure,
  • dating
  • Or general fear of certain social situations such
    as parties

29
Normal activities
  • fear of using a public restroom,
  • eating out in public restaurants alone or with
    others,
  • talking on the phone,
  • or writing in the presence of other people, such
    as when signing a check.
  • (restrooms restaurants, public places in
    general can be similar to germ phobia)

30
formal summary
  • marked and persistent fear of one or more
    social or performance situations in which the
    person is exposed to unfamiliar people or to
    possible scrutiny by others.
  • The individual fears that he or she will act in
    a way (or show anxiety symptoms) that will be
    humiliating or embarrassing

31
Specific Phobias
  • Marked and persistent fear that is excessive or
    unreasonable, cued by the presence or
    anticipation of a specific object or situation
  • (e.g., flying, heights, animals, receiving an
    injection, seeing blood).

32
Superstition
  • What is superstition?
  • Similar to Phobia?

33
  • The word "superstition" means something standing
    above, or set above. The earliest English uses of
    the word in the modern era refer critically to
    Catholic practices such as censing, rosaries,
    holy water and other practices that Protestants
    believed went beyond - or were set up above -
    their own interpretation of the New Testament
    practices of Christianity. From there the uses of
    the term expanded to include non-Christian
    religious practices, and beliefs that seemed
    unfounded or primitive in the light of modern
    knowledge.

34
  • Many extant superstitions arose before and
    during the time of the Plague that swept over
    Europe. During the time of a plague, Pope Gregory
    the Great made a decree for people to say God
    bless you when somebody sneezed this was said
    to prevent the spread of the disease

35
Modern meaning
  • From the Reformation the uses of the term
    expanded to include non-Christian religious
    practices, and beliefs that seemed unfounded or
    primitive in the light of modern knowledge.

36
  • In Western folklore, superstitions associated
    with bad luck include Friday the 13th and walking
    under a ladder

37
  • When a person goes out to hunt animals, the
    people who stay at home may not touch oil or
    water with their hands during the absence of
    their friend for if they did so, the hunters
    would all be "butter-fingered" and the prey would
    "slip through their fingers".

38
  • Many believe that if all of the candles on a
    birthday cake are blown out with one breath,
    while making a silent wish, the wish will come
    true.

39
  • If a penny is found heads up, it will grant good
    luck, however, tails up will grant bad luck. This
    can be "undone " by then giving the penny to
    someone else heads-up

40
  • Good Luck Superstitions A frog brings good luck
    to the house it enters. A spider spinning in
    the morning. Carry an acorn to bring luck
    ensure a long life

41
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42
Treatment
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