phobias

    Cards (11)

    • what is the DSM-5 and what is it used for?
      diagnostic statistical manual, used by doctors to diagnose mental disorders. we are now of version 5, so we call it DSM-5
    • what does the DSM-5 define a phobia as?
      an irrational fear of an object of situation
    • what are the levels we can experience anxiety?
      behaviourally - how we act. for example, freeze or flight
      emotionally - how we feel about it. for example, feeling panic
      cognitively - how we think about it. for example, what we perceive or believe
    • how does a person with a phobia experience anxiety?
      out of proportion to the actual threat. the phobia interferes with their ability to function and can become chronic or a disabling response
    • what are the categories of phobias that the DSM-5 recognises?
      specific phobia
      social anxiety (social phobia)
      agoraphobia
    • what is a specific phobia?
      intense fear of a particular object or situation. for example, animals like spiders/dogs, situations like flying/enclosed spaces (claustrophobia), natural environment like heights or blood-injection types like injections, needles etc.
    • what is a social anxiety/social phobia?
      intense fear of a social situation based on fear of exposure/humiliation. for example, fear of eating in restaurants, using public toilets etc. because the sufferer is afraid someone will see them expressing their fear by a trembling hand/blushing etc. and think badly of them
    • what is agoraphobia?
      intense fear of being in a public space. for example, shopping malls or crowded streets etc. but it manifests itself as a fear of leaving the house. the sufferer fears dying or anything as bad, and as a result is afraid of having a panic attack where they don't feel safe. safety is the main priority rather than embarrassment
    • what are the behavioural characteristics of phobias?
      panic - crying/screaming etc. or a child may freeze, cling or throw a tantrum
      avoidance - avoid the stimulus that triggers their phobia, like not going in a room with a spider
      endurance - remaining in the presence of their phobic stimulus and continues to experience high levels of anxiety, like when flying
    • what are the emotional characteristics of phobias?
      anxiety - constant worry about the stimulus and which prevents sufferer from relaxing/anything positive
      fear - the immediate fight or flight response when sufferer comes in contacts or even thinks about the stimulus
    • what are the cognitive characteristics of phobias
      selective attention to the stimulus - the sufferer finds it difficult to look away from the stimulus (being unable to look away from a small spider)
      irrational beliefs - overthinking what their phobia could do to them (people with a social phobia may feel that people will strongly disapprove if they blush)
      cognitive distortions - how the sufferer perceives the stimulus may be distorted like a spider has 'huge, aggressive fangs'
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