Anxiety: avoidance Flashcards
1
Q
What is avoidance in relation to anxiety disorders?
A
- Avoidance is the core component to anxiety disorders
- Relational to external stimuli or internal experiences
- Commonst coping mechanism to reduce classically conditioned fear and anxiety
2
Q
How does avoidance manifest in GAD, SAD, and panic disorder?
A
- GAD: Worry is used to distract from:
- More distressing experiences (Borkovec, 2004)
- Intolerance to uncertainity (Dugas, 2005)
- Worry itself (Wells, 1995)
- Emotion (Mennin et al, 2004)
- SAD: Safety behaviours (eye contact and verbal limitations) to mask percieved sources of embarrassment
- Panic disorder: interoceptive avoidance (prevention of somatic experiences)
3
Q
Outline the short and longterm effects of avoidance in anxiety disorders
A
- Anxiety, often due to exaggerated perceptions, prevents exposure to alternative outcomes that challeng and replace orignal conditioning via extinction learning
- Short-term reductions in distress negatively reinforce avoidance behaviour (Salters et al, 2004)
- Long-term avoidance exacerbates the distress that avoidance to suppossed to prevent
4
Q
How does longterm avoidance generally worsen distress?
A
- Thought suppression is used during cognitive distress
- Evidence suggests a paradoxical rebound effect
- Increases thought frequency
- Particularly during cognitive overload (Salters et al, 2014)
- Physiological arousal can both improve and worsen during avoidance
- GAD (Wells, 1995) and PD (Clark, 1986) are anxiety disorders where physiological arousal is often catastrophically misinterpreted to maintain the conditions
- Emotional avoidance creates a similar paradoxical effect
- Increased emotional experience
- Diminishes adaptive learning, further reducing potential for extinction learning
- Associated with poor interpersonal function and higher arousal to threat
- Prevents formation of protective social interactions, communication skills, and problem solving (Salters et al, 2014)
5
Q
Discuss the impact of avoidance on GAD
A
- Worry as a distraction is self-reported as the only distinguishing factor between sub-clinical and clinical GAD (Borkovec, 1995)
- Metacognitive model (Wells, 1995) states that GAD develops once ‘worry about worry’ occurs, as the primary worries are seen as both helpful and damaging
- Worry is associated with insecure attachement and exploitability, increasing perceptions of generalised threat
6
Q
Discuss the impact of avoidance on SAD
A
- Thought suppression and catastrophic thinking especially relevant in individuals that believe their anxiety is visible
- Cognitive bias attributes safety behaviours as the reason for successful social interactions
- These are postively reinforced
- Avoiding eye contact and limiting verbalisation often equate to disinterest or dissatisfaction
- Subsequently reducing likelihood of successful social engagement (Spence & Rapee, 2016)
- Link between emotional distress and physiological arousal
- Any distress can create visible embarrassing features (blushing, shaking)
- SAD aims to fundamental avoid these
- Emotional suppression
- Reduces centre of attention
- Prevention expression of needs and formation of protection relations
7
Q
Discuss the impact of avoidance on Panic Disorder
A
- Clark’s (1986) model of panic: catastrophic misintepretation of even the mildest somatic symptoms
- Interoceptive avoidance includes avoiding exercise to prevent tachycardia, creates many restrictions and dysfunction
- Also extends to strong emotions (anger, excitement) that generate physiological arousal (Salters et al, 2014)
- Alexithymia (difficulty expressiong emotion, instead communication with physiology) may develop
- Emotional distress therefore becomes another source of catastrophic misinterpretation