Anxiety: development and maintenance Flashcards
1
Q
Introduce anxiety disorders
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- Anxiety disorders are characterised by excessive worrying
- Often with accompanying avoidance
- Causes significant psychological distress and/or dysfunction
- One of the commonest mental disorders across children (Whiteside et al, 2016) and adults (Baker, 2018)
2
Q
Describe the overarching theory for anxiety disorders
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- Aetiology of GAD and other mental disorders
- Theory of triple vulnerability (Barlow, 2000)
- Generalised biological vulnerability
- Generalised psychological vulnerability
- Specific psychological vulnerability
3
Q
Discuss the biological predispositions for anxiety disorders
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- Genetic predisposition is considered one of the most highly implicated developmental factors for anxiety (Liu et al, 2011)
- GAD demonstrates a significant familial pattern, with 1o relatives incurring a five-times increased risk
- Genes associated with GAD account for 25-50% of its onset and increased vulnerability to other anxiety and depression disorders (NICE, 2011)
- SAD shares substantial familial links (Spence & Rapee, 2016)
- Temperament is robustly associated with anxiety disorders
- High neuroticism is a predisposing factor for GAD (NICE, 2011)
- Low extraversion or high behavioural inhibition significantly increase risk for SAD (Spence & Rapee, 2016)
4
Q
Discuss how parenting style influences anxiety
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- Overcontrolling parental style suggest to constently produce BI
- Also is a predictor of social anxiety (Spence & Rapee, 2016)
- Creates environment lacking warmth, causing insecure attachment and reductions in sense of agency (NICE, 2011)
- This (environment) has been reported in upbrings of individuals with GAD
- Overcontrolling parenting seen in other childhood adversities (abuse), which are additional risk factors for GAD (2011)
5
Q
Discuss the role of culture for anxiety disorders
A
- Interestingly, East Asian cultures demonstrate an inverse relationship
- Behavioural inhibition confers positive adjustment in children
- Reflects cultural differences, where East Asian culture emphasises social harmony over autonomy (Chen et al, 2009)
- Protective factor in social norms, and risk factor when outside social norms
6
Q
Discuss the general psychological vulnerability for anxiety
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- ‘Looming cognitive style’ seen in many anxiety disorders (NICE, 2011)
- A set of cognitive biases towards threat
- Increased attention
- Overestimation of external threat
- Enhanced memory
7
Q
Discuss how transdiagnostic factors contribute to anxiety
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- Several transdiagnostic factor contribute to develop and/or maintenance
- It is extremely difficult to distinguish between causal and maintaining factors from current evidence (Spence & Rapee, 2016)
- Factors specific for SAD are rarely identified
- Insufficient data to establish causation of theoretical explanations such as safety behaviours in SAD (Spence & Rapee, 2016)
8
Q
- Precipitating factors for various mental illnesses often consist of recent stressful life events
- Loss events are associated with onset of depression and GAD
- Dangerous events more often precipitate GAD (NICE, 2011)
- Social stressors reported in SAD, especially negative interactions with peers (Spence & Rapee, 2016)
- Peer victimisation is the only factor to undergo extensive longitudinal study
- It is both a risk factor and a consequnce for social anxiety, showing a cyclical maintaining factor for SAD
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