Phobias Flashcards

1
Q

General Facts

A
  • common, treatable, and well-understood
  • lifetime prevalence estimates of 11%
  • For certain phobias up to 90% achieve long-lasting improvement in only one treatment session
  • here’s the problem: propel with specific phobias rarely seek treatment
  • only about 12.5% seek treatment
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2
Q

Severe Impairments

A
  • put off surgery due to fear of pre-op blood work
  • woman with spider phobia left the car while moving
  • student who dropped out of med school due to fear of blood
  • man who wouldn’t leave home when it was cloudy
  • executive who turned down a promotion because of fear of flying
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3
Q

DSM V definition of Phobias

A

“the fear or anxiety is out of proportion to the actual danger posed by the specific object or situation and to the sociocultural context”

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4
Q

Types of Phobias

A
  1. Animal- spiders, insects, worms, snakes, dogs, cats, rodents
  2. Natural environment type- heights, near water, storms, wind, sunshine, darkness
  3. Blood-injection injury (BII)- seeing blood, receiving an injection or other invasive medical procedure, watching surgery, talking about surgical procedures, having a blood test
  4. Situational type- public transportation, tunnels, bridges, flying, driving, elevators, enclosed spaces
  5. Other- situations that might lead to vomiting, loud sounds, clowns, certain flowers or plants
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5
Q

Most Common Phobias

A

Lifetime phobia rate:

- animals 5.7
- height 5.3
- blood 4.5
    - closed spaces 4.2
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6
Q

Sex Differences

A

women are more scared than men with phobias except dentist phobias

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7
Q

Interventions

A
  • wide agreement on expoure as treatment of choice
  • based on Wolpe’s systematic desensitization
    • several variations:
  • in vivo more effective in reducing fear, briefer
  • studies have found little benefit to relaxation training
  • single 2-3 hour sessions have been effective for animals, injections, dentistry
  • modeling is not sufficient; direct exposure is 2-3x more effective
  • applied tension for BII phobias (intentionally raise blood pressure before being exposed to the phobia; tensing leg muscles; to help stop someone from fainting)
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