1 Specific Phobias & GAD JONATHAN GASTON DIRECTOR – EMOTIONAL HEALTH CLINIC CENTRE FOR EMOTIONAL HEALTH
Apr 01, 2015
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Specific Phobias& GAD
JONATHAN GASTON DIRECTOR – EMOTIONAL HEALTH CLINIC
CENTRE FOR EMOTIONAL HEALTH
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Defining Fear/Anxiety
• ‘Fight-Flight Response’• A necessary inbuilt protective response
mechanism to protect us from danger and help us survive
• Only a problem when:• Mechanism is switched on when we don’t
want it to be OR• The intensity of the response seems ‘out of
proportion’ to the actual danger
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Physiological Anxiety Response• Rapid heart, heart palpitations, pounding heart • Sweating • Trembling or shaking • Shortness of breath or smothering sensations • Dry mouth or feeling of choking • Chest pain or discomfort • Nausea, stomach distress or gastrointestinal upset • Cold chills or hot flushes • Dizziness, unsteady feelings, lightheadedness, or
faintness • Feelings of unreality or feeling detached from oneself • Numbing or tingling sensations • Visual changes (e.g., light seems too bright, spots, etc.) • Blushing or red blotchy skin (especially around face) • Muscle tension, twitching, weakness or heaviness
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Neurobiology of Anxiety (Stein et al., 2007; Etkin & Wager, 2007)
1. Amygdala Hyperactivity – central to fear conditioning
2. Insula Hyperactivity– regulates autonomic nervous system and associated with interoceptive awareness
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CBT MODELS & ANXIETY
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‘Traditional’ A-B-C Model of CBT• Linear• Unidirectional• ‘Thoughts cause feelings’
A B C DSituations Thoughts Feelings Behaviour
• Focus is on challenging irrational thoughts (cognitive restructuring)
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More Current CBT Model
Thoughts
Physiology Mood/Emotion
Behaviour
• Non-linear• Integrative• All components of equal importance
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COGNITION
Physiology(Physical
Symptoms)
Mood/Emotion
Behaviour Perception/Attention
‘More Conscious’
‘More Automatic’
Final Cognitive Pathway Model
‘Environment’
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Cognitive Pathway Model• Cognitive, behavioural, emotional,
physiological and attentional approaches are potentially ‘synergistic’ not ‘antagonistic’
• Humans always employing cognitive processes in solving any problem- whether these processes be more automatic or more conscious in nature
• Different common pathways (eg., conditioning, observational learning, cognitive challenging, emotional processing, mindfulness) lead to same final common pathway: “Action on an underlying cognitive belief
structure”
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DANGER/THREATAPPRAISALS
Anxiety Symptoms
‘Fight or Flight’
Response
Anxiety/Fear& Apprehension
Safety BehavioursAvoidance
EscapeNeutralising
Hypervigilance for Danger‘Scanning for threat’Look for ‘confirming evidence’
‘Probability’ & ‘Cost’
Final Cognitive Pathway Model for Anxiety
‘Environment’
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Aim of Treatment for Anxiety
“To modify danger/threat appraisals to become more
realistic and adaptive”
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In Designing Treatment for Anxiety
• Key in Assessment: What are the specific danger/threat expectancies?
• Key in Treatment: What factors are currently maintaining the specific danger/threat expectancies?
• Order of Effectiveness in Learning: (Reiss, 1980)1. Experience2. Observation3. Symbolic (e.g., language)
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CBT for Anxiety - Cognition
• Key: need to address both probability and cost with some fears
• Also need to consider ‘Metacognition' - beliefs about the problem itself:– problem (causes, maintenance, costs, benefits)– utility of current coping strategies (general)– specific safety strategies– change– self-efficacy– coping with actual physiological sx. (are sx.
harmful?)
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CBT for Anxiety - Behaviour
• Key: How is the client's behaviour maintaining their threat appraisals?
• Safety Behaviours– avoidance & escape behaviours– proactive (‘neutralising’) behaviours– 'subtle' in-sitn. safety behaviours– cognitive safety behaviours
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CBT for Anxiety – Physiology & Emotion• traditionally a ‘control-based’ approach• now less emphasis than previously • relaxation can useful as general
stress/anxiety reduction tool• be careful intervention strategies do
not become safety behaviours• often treatment (exposure) will involve
increasing Sx.• ‘symptom surfing’ - increase coping• ‘symptom exposure’ – increase tolerance
‘short term gain vs. long-term change’
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CBT for Anxiety - Attention
• attentional focus can interfere with the processing of information from feared situations (‘selective filter’)
• client needs to process 'range' of perceptual evidence
• 'task-focussed attention'• 'mindfulness' (being in the
moment)• how best to train???
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Do Psychotherapies produce Neurobiological effects? (Kumari, 2008)• Emerging empirical evidence to demonstrate
that psychological therapies produce changes at the neural level
• Paquette et al., (2003)– Successful CBT modified neural activity in the
dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the para-hippocampal gyrus in a group of spider phobics
– “CBT reduces phobic avoidance by de-conditioning contextual fear learned at the hippocampal/parahippocampal region, and by decreasing cognitive misattributions and catastrophic thinking at the level of the prefrontal cortex”
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SPECIFIC PHOBIAS
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Lohr, Oluntunji & Sawchuk (2007)• The more explicitly danger is signalled in terms of
location, duration, intensity & onset, the more specifiable safety signals can be
• Specific phobias provide the best example of a danger signal with clearly defined boundaries & properties
• The safety behaviour of avoidance is often so effective that daily life is only minimally disrupted
• This may account partially for the significant discrepancy between the high diagnostic prevalence vs. the low proportion seeking treatment (1%)
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SPECIFIC PHOBIA - DSM IV
A. MARKED AND PERSISTENT FEAR THAT IS EXCESSIVE OR UNREASONABLE AND CUED BY PRESENCE OR ANTICIPATION OF A SPECIFIC OBJECT OR SITUATION.
B. EXPOSURE TO STIMULUS ALMOST INVARIABLE PROVOKES IMMEDIATE ANXIETY.
C. PERSON RECOGNISES EXCESSIVENESS OF FEAR.
D. STIMULUS AVOIDED OR ENDURED WITH DREAD.
E. AVOIDANCE INTERFERES SIGNIFICANTLY WITH NORMAL ROUTINE OR FUNCTIONING
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Specific Phobia - Subtypes
ANIMAL – spiders, snakes, other insects, dogs, birds, sharks, etc
NATURAL ENVIRONMENT – storms, heights, water
BLOOD, INJECTION, INJURY – seeing blood or an injury, receiving an injection or invasive medical procedure (common fainting response)
SITUATIONAL – tunnels, bridges, elevators, flying driving, enclosed spaces, driving
OTHER – choking, vomiting, contracting an illness, loud noises, costumed characters
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DANGER/THREAT APPRAISALS IN SPECIFIC PHOBIAS?
• Pain• Physical/bodily harm• Illness/Disease• Death
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Demographics of Specific Phobia
• LIFETIME PREVALENCE 12.5% (Kessler et al., 2005)• AGE OF ONSET YOUNG (ÖST)
– ANIMAL FEARS - <7– BLOOD - <9– DENTAL - <12– SITUATIONAL (CLAUSTRO) - 20
• AGE OF PRESENTATION ??• SEX DISTRIBUTION FEMALE 2:1 ratio• COURSE OF DISORDER UNKNOWN• DEGREE OF INTERFERENCE LOW• COMORBIDITY HIGH WITH OTHER
ANXIETY DIS(Magee et al.,
1996)
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HERITABILITY OF SPECIFIC PHOBIAS – KENDLER ET AL (1999)
TYPE HERITABILITY
ANIMAL 47%
BLOOD / INJURY 59%
SITUATIONAL 46%
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CONDITIONING THEORY OF PHOBIAS
CS UCS
(DOG) (BITE)
CR UCR(FEAR) (PAIN/FEAR)
AVOID
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PROBLEMS WITH THE CONDITIONING THEORY OF PHOBIAS - RACHMAN (1970), SELIGMAN (1971)• MANY AVERSIVE EXPERIENCES DO NOT
RESULT IN PHOBIAS (E.G. AIR-RAIDS)• PHOBICS DO NOT OFTEN RECALL
“CONDITIONING”• PHOBIAS DO NOT EXTINGUISH EASILY• PHOBIAS OCCUR TO A LIMITED SET OF
STIMULI (NO EQUIPOTENTIALITY)
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PREPAREDNESS THEORY OF PHOBIAS - SELIGMAN (1971)
A PREPARED STIMULUS IS ONE WHERE:
• FEAR IS ACQUIRED IN A SINGLE LEARNING TRIAL
• THE FEAR IS NON-COGNITIVE• THE FEAR IS RESISTANT TO
EXTINCTION
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SUPPORT FOR PREDICTIONS MADE BY THE PREPAREDNESS THEORY OF PHOBIAS (McNALLY, 1987)
PREDICTION SUPPORTED
1. FEAR ACQUIRED MORE QUICKLY TO PREPARED CUE
X
2. FEAR OF PREPARED CUE MORE IRRATIONAL
X
3. PREPARED STIMULI WILL SELECTIVELY ASSOCIATE BETTER WITH PARTICULAR OUTCOMES
X
4. PREPARED ASSOCIATIONS WILL BE HARDER TO EXTINGUISH
✓
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Rachman (1976, 1977, 1991)
Three (learning-based) Pathways to Fear:
1) Classical conditioning2) Vicarious acquisition through direct or
indirect observations3) Informational acquisition
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SPECIFIC THREAT EXPERIENCES IN HEIGHT PHOBIA (MENZIES & CLARK, 1993)
DIRECT CONDITIONING 18%
VICARIOUS EXPERIENCES 20%
VERBAL INFORMATION 8%
“ALWAYS” 30%
A NON-ASSOCIATIVE ACCOUNT OF FEAR ACQUISITION ?
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RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FALLS AND FEAR OF HEIGHTS (POULTON ET AL, 1998)
SERIOUS FALLS BEFORE AGE 5
FEAR OF HEIGHTS
AGE 11
YES NO
YES 4% 7%
FEAR OF HEIGHTS
AGE 18
YES NO
YES 7% 12%
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RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN FALLS AND FEAR OF HEIGHTS (POULTON ET AL, 1998)
SERIOUS FALLS AGES 5 TO 9
FEAR OF HEIGHTS
AGE 11
YES NO
YES 7% 7%
FEAR OF HEIGHTS
AGE 18*
YES NO
YES
* p < .05
2% 13%
Cognitive Vulnerability Model of Phobias
Specific Phobia – Treatment Issues• The development of good, well-designed and
specific exposure hierarchies• Being innovative in planning exposure (e.g.,
time vs. task)• Potential benefits of massed exposure/quick
gains ???• The client doing enough exposure (dose-
response issue)• Dealing with the physical sx. of anxiety while
doing exposure• ‘Subtle avoidance’ which may reduce exposure
effect (the case for early ‘guided’ exposure)• The case for ‘overlearning’ ???• Applied tension for fainting in blood-injury
phobia• ‘Fear vs. disgust’
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Optimising Exposure (Craske et al., 2008)
1. Variability throughout Exposure– Retention of learned material is enhanced
by random and variable practice– While variation increases learning
difficulty, it enhances long-term outcome– Variation increases the storage strength of
information– Variation results in pairing the information
to be learned with more retrieval cues, this enhancing retrievability
– Variation leads to superior generalization
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Optimising Exposure (Craske et al., 2008)2. Spacing of Exposure Tasks
– Temporally spaced learning trials may result in stronger learning acquisition than massed
– Evidence suggests though that each trial must sufficiently violate fear expectancies
– ? Massed X Spaced interaction– Some evidence for ‘tapering’ (progressively
longer intervals between exposure occasions
3. Context Effects– Should conduct exposure therapy in
multiple contexts, especially those in which the previously feared stimulus is likely to be encountered once treatment is over
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Optimising Exposure (Craske et al., 2008)
4. Fear Toleration vs. Fear Reduction– Emotional regulation is potentially
dysfunctional when applied rigidly to down regulate emotions through suppression, control, avoidance or escape
– Persistent attempts to down regulate aversive states are often critical to the onset of phobias and other anxiety disorders
– Some evidence that sustaining fear responding throughout extinction may actually enhance extinction learning
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GENERALISED ANXIETY DISORDER
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Lohr, Oluntunji & Sawchuk (2007)• The more explicitly danger is signalled in terms of location,
duration, intensity & onset, the more specifiable safety signals can be
• Danger signals that transcend time and place (unpredictability of onset) make for poorly defined safety signal development
• Danger signals in the form of intrusive thoughts and worries that are future-oriented and involve catastrophic outcomes with objectively low probability do not allow for the establishment of safety relative to current time and place
• The broad nature of threat will render safety seeking behaviour as ill defined and generalised
• Is GAD largely a chronic but unsuccessful search for safety ? (Woody & Rachman, 1994)
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GAD: DSM-IV Criteria
A. EXCESSIVE ANXIETY AND WORRY OCCURRING MORE DAYS THAN NOT FOR AT LEAST SIX MONTHS ABOUT A NUMBER OF EVENTS.
B. DIFFICULTY CONTROLLING THE WORRY
C. AT LEAST THREE OF THE FOLLOWING:– 1) RESTLESSNESS OR FEELING KEYED UP– 2) EASILY FATIGUED– 3) DIFFICULTY CONCENTRATING– 4) IRRITABILITY– 5) MUSCLE TENSION– 6) SLEEP DISTURBANCE
D. FOCUS OF WORRY NOT ANOTHER AXIS 1
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DANGER/THREAT APPRAISALS IN GAD?
Many and variedTwo key underlying issues:1. The world is an unpredictable and unsafe
place2. I am ill-equipped to deal and cope with this
danger and general uncertainty (‘ a poor coper’)
People with GAD like control and predictability
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DEFINITION OF WORRYBORKOVEC ET AL. (1983)
• AN ATTEMPT TO ENGAGE IN MENTAL PROBLEM-SOLVING ON AN UNCERTAIN ISSUE WITH A POTENTIAL THREAT OUTCOME
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CONTENT OF WORRIES IN GAD- ROEMER ET AL (1997)
GAD% OF TOTAL
WORRIES
NON-CLINICAL
FAMILY / HOME / RELATIONSHIPS
31.4 28.2
FINANCES 10.8 5.6
WORK / SCHOOL 22.0 36.6
ILLNESS / HEALTH 9.6 9.9
MISCELLANEOUS 26.3 19.7
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CONTENT OF MISCELLANEOUS WORRIES IN GAD - ROEMER ET AL (1997)
GAD% OF TOTAL
WORRIES
NON-CLINICAL
PSYCHOLOGICAL/ EMOTIONAL
20.9 28.6
MINOR/ ROUTINE 45.2 7.1
FUTURE 12.2 14.3
SUCCESS/FAILURE 14.8 35.7
TRAVEL 6.9 14.3
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FEATURES OF WORRY IN GADCRASKE ET AL. (1989)
GAD NON-CLINICAL
DURATION 310.3 237.1
ANXIETY 5.17 3.98
CONTROL * 6.00 3.51
REALISM * 4.33 2.71
SUCCESS OF STOPPING *
2.61 4.50
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GAD - DEMOGRAPHICS
• GAD has a lifetime prevalence of 5%• GAD affects approximately 400 000 adult
Australians each year• Gender ratio: Females 60%• GAD makes the top 12 diseases for disability
adjusted life years lost• GAD presents a substantial financial cost to
the community, e.g., high health care costs and lost work productivity
• GAD is associated with substantial co-morbidity - primarily other anxiety disorders & depression
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DSM-IV DISORDERS AND AFFECTIVE STRUCTURE – BROWN ET AL (1998)
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Life Interference• GAD interferes with:
– Work and academic functioning/aspirations
(over & under achievement)
– Enjoyment and quality of life(chronic cognitive & physical arousal, avoidance)
– Emotional experience
(can be aloof or overly-emotional)– Engagement in interpersonal relationships
(stress, intimacy, genuineness, avoidance, isolation)
Pure GAD is equally as disabling as pure MDD
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Course• GAD has an early onset and a chronic
course• Most people with GAD have always been
worriers• Mean onset is between the teens and late
twenties• BUT, onset may be earlier (children were
previously diagnosed with “overanxious” disorder)
• GAD symptoms are chronic and persist for 10 yrs or more
• GAD is unlikely to remit spontaneously
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PROBABILITY OF REMISSION OF GAD (YONKERS ET AL, 1996)
WEEK REMISSION FROM GAD ONLY
REMISSION FROM GAD PLUS ALL OTHER
ANXIETY
26 0.11 0.03
52 0.15 0.07
104 0.25 0.17
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Contributing Factors?• Genetics, temperament factors, parenting
styles• Some evidence that people with GAD have more
insecure attachment styles– primarily ambivalent• Childhood relationships characterized by
enmeshment with caregivers – children had inappropriate levels of responsibility (parenting their parents)
• Some evidence of heightened levels of early trauma • These factors impact on:
– Coping styles and Self-efficacy – Enhance vigilance and planning for threat, but feel poorly
resourced to deal with actual threat; feeling overwhelmed– Enhance fears of uncontrollability and unpredictability – Children may internalize beliefs about vulnerability,
weakness, inadequacy
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FREQUENCY OF DISORDERS IN 1ST DEGREE RELATIVES - NOYES ET AL. (1987)
02468
101214161820
RELS OFGAD
RELS OFNONCLIN
RELS OF PD
GADPDAFFECTIVE
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MODELS OF GAD
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WORRY AS EMOTIONAL SUPPRESSION - BORKOVEC
• WORRY COMPLETELY SEMANTIC• FULL EMOTIONAL PROCESSING REQUIRES
BOTH SEMANTIC AND VISUAL PROCESSING• HENCE WHEN WORRY - EMOTIONS
PROCESSED AT A “LOWER” LEVEL• THUS WORRY USED TO AVOID COMPLETE
EMOTIONAL EXPERIENCE• IN TURN, EMOTIONAL ISSUES ARE
MAINTAINED
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Emotional Avoidance and Regulation 1
• Borkovec’s cognitive avoidance model essentially says that people with GAD fear intense negative emotions
• But he doesn’t conceptualise this as another threat appraisal that is fuelling worry
• Instead he argues that worry has a function, that is, it acts as a form of cognitive avoidance that inhibits negative affect through the automatic/unconscious inhibition of imaginal processing
• This in turn negatively reinforces the use of worry as an emotion regulation strategy, which dampens anxiety in the short term
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Emotional Avoidance and Regulation 2
• Mennin et al. (2002, 2004), following from Borkovec, have suggested that GAD is a disorder of emotion dysregulation involving:
– Heightened emotional intensity– Heightened emotional reactivity– Maladaptive emotional management– Poor understanding of emotions Leading to
emotionalavoidance
Poor tolerance of emotions
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RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN WORRY, COPING & ANXIETY - DAVEY (1992)
• PARTIAL CORRELATIONS BETWEEN WORRY AND COPING, CONTROLLING FOR TRAIT ANXIETY
• ACTIVE COGNITIVE COPING .26*• ACTIVE BEHAVIOURAL COPING.11• AVOIDANT COPING .30*
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COGNITIVE MODEL OF GAD(WELLS, 1995)
TRIGGER
POSITIVE META-BELIEFS ACTIVATED (STRATEGY SELECTION)
TYPE 1 WORRY
NEGATIVE META-BELIEFS ACTIVATED
TYPE 2 WORRY
BEHAVIOUR
THOUGHT CONTROL
EMOTION
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TYPE 1 Worries (Wells,1995)
1. Concern external daily events– (e.g., health of a partner)
2. Concern non-cognitive internal events– (e.g., bodily sensations)
TYPE 2 Worries – Meta-worry (Wells, 1995)• How people appraise (both positive &
negative) the activity and function of worry
• ‘worry about worry’• This meta-worry leads to the client further
engaging in Type 1 worry• Can broaden concept to use with other
anxiety and non-anxiety problems - ‘beliefs clients may hold about their problems’ (origin, nature, maintenance, costs & benefits)
• Fit/misfit between your treatment model and their implicit model will effect engagement and progress
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A THREAT EXPECTANCY (INTEGRATIVE) MODEL OF
GAD(Abbott & Gaston, 2003)
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Threat Expectancy in GADThe potential for danger is everywhere!• Our model suggests that there are five
core categories of threat expectancy that can be activated in GAD1. Situations themselves are potentially
threatening2. Potential confirmation of negative core beliefs
is threatening3. Affect itself is perceived as threatening4. The consequences of not coping are seen as
threatening5. Worry process itself is perceived as
threatening
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Threat, Affect and Neutralizing
• These ways of perceiving threat may be activated in isolation or in combination, and they all feed the perceived intensity of worry and anxiety
• Biological/tolerance factors may moderate the actual amount of affect experienced
• The cognitive and affective experience of anxiety triggers the use of avoidance and safety strategies to control potential threat and aversive experience
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Predisposing Factors
• Predisposing factors for GAD include: – A genetic predisposition to negative affect– Ruminative perseverative cognitive style– Intolerance of strong negative affect– Early life experiences – Parenting styles
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Negative Core Schemas in GAD
• Predisposing factors lead to the development of underlying schema. Themes of negative schema in GAD seem to include beliefs like:– I am defective– I am vulnerable– I am weak– I am inadequate/incompetent– I am worthless
• According to the model, these underlying negative schema drive threat expectancies in GAD
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TE1. Inflated Perceptions of Situational Threat
• Overestimate the probability of negative events occurring
AND• Overestimate the cost of negative
events, should they occur AND
• Underestimate their ability to cope, should a negative outcome occur
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Intolerance of Uncertainty (Dugas et al., 2004)
• People with GAD find uncertainty threatening – fearing and avoiding situations with ambiguous outcomes– preferring the occurrence of a negative outcome to it’s
possibility– Only situations that are perfectly controlled are safe
• But, uncertainty is certainly inevitable!• Anxiety about uncertainty is closely linked to
fears about unpredictability & uncontrollability and positive beliefs about worry
“If I am in control and know what will happen, then I can prevent negative outcomes”
“worry helps me do this”
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INTOLERANCE OF UNCERTAINTY AND WORRY - DUGAS ET AL. (1997)
CORRELATION WITH PSWQ
UNIQUE VARIANCE EXPLAINED
BAI .54 25.2%
BDI .53 8.0%
PROB SOLV SKILLS .16 0.6%
INTOL. OF UNCERT. .70 16.3%
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TE2. Confirmation of Beliefs about the Self• Anxiety is also experienced when there is the
potential for negative core beliefs to be confirmed – e.g., Doing an exam will be anxiety-provoking if you
believe it may confirm beliefs about inadequacy • In response to the anxiety, clients use safety
strategies, like perfectionism– e.g., Engaging in non-stop studying to prevent
potential failure– e.g., Last minute studying allows a more palatable
“excuse” should failure occur• Potential confirmation of beliefs triggers anxiety • Perceived confirmation of beliefs triggers low mood
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TE3. Meta-beliefs about Affect
• Negative affect is perceived as threatening in GAD because it is experienced as overwhelming and distressing
• The experience of intense affect triggers attempts at avoidance or neutralizing
• Emotions that may be perceived as threatening:– Fear and Anxiety– Anger– Depression– Positive affect?
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TE4. Meta-beliefs about Coping
• The perceived consequences of not coping with negative outcomes is also seen as threatening
• For example, If I can’t cope with the feared event, does that mean:– I am a failure?– I am irresponsible?– It’s my fault?– I am a bad person?– I can’t tolerate these feelings of guilt …
• People with GAD hold rigid standards about coping – they should cope perfectly, without any distress
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TE5. Meta-beliefs About Cognition - Worry is Threatening
• People with GAD hold strong beliefs that the process of worrying is dangerous to them (e.g., Wells, 1997)
• If you believe that worry is harmful then you will probably spend a lot of time monitoring your thoughts, trying not to worry, and engaging in a range of associated safety strategies (e.g., checking physical symptoms; thought suppression)
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Examples of Negative Meta-worries• My worrying is uncontrollable• Worrying is harmful to me• I could “go crazy” from worrying • My worries will take over and control me• I could get into a state of worrying and then never be able
to stop• If I worry too much I could lose control• Worrying makes me physically sick and puts stress on my
body• If I don’t control my worry then it will control me• If I worry it means I am a weak person• People will respect me less if they find out about my worry• My worry is harmful to others (eg family members)
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Avoidance & Proactive Safety Strategies – ‘Trying to Feel Safe and In Control’• The experience of intense negative affect
triggers the use of behavioural, cognitive and emotional safety strategies– Perfectionistic behaviour may be triggered if
not doing well on a task confirms beliefs about inadequacy
– Engaging in frequent attempts to suppress worries may be triggered by beliefs that worry is harmful
• People with GAD use a large array of safety strategies to try and control potential negative outcomes and so they can feel safe
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Some Safety Strategies
Behavioural
Reassurance seeking
Controlling others, situations, feelings
Perfectionism
Over-responsibility
Busyness
Procrastination
Avoiding uncertainty
Avoiding triggers
Cognitive
Thought suppression
Shifting, narrowing attention
Distraction
Checking symptoms
Positive meta-beliefs about worry??
Rumination??
Emotional
Repression
Dissociation
Numbing
Emotional blunting
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Effects of Using Safety Strategies• Safety strategies provide some relief
from anxiety in the short-term by exerting a dampening effect on anxiety
• But, safety strategies reinforce negative underlying schema and threat expectancies in the long term by:– Preventing disconfirmation of beliefs about
threat – Providing some confirmation for beliefs
about threat
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TREATING GAD
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Standard CBT Components
• Psychoeducation about anxiety• Detecting triggers and early warning signs• Implementing alternative coping strategies • Teaching realistic thinking skills• Teaching relaxation skills• Teaching problem solving/stress-reduction
skills• Graded exposure (e.g., to worry triggers)• Exposure to worry• Worry time
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Treatment Reality
• Research has shown that CBT is effective at reducing anxiety for sufferers. But the outcome data is not so impressive and we can still do a lot better
• “After 16 years of concerted effort, applications of behavioral and cognitive therapy techniques for treating this anxiety disorder continue to fail to bring about 50% of our clients back to within normal degrees of anxiety” (Borkovec, 2002, p.76)
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What Should We Address in Therapy?• Myriad of threat expectancies• Underlying negative schemas• The multitude of safety strategies that
are in place to neutralize or avoid potential threat
• Particularly important to address the avoidance of intense affect and to facilitate the completion of emotional processing
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Acceptance & Mindfulness-based Approaches• Premise: ‘We compound our suffering by trying
to avoid it’• Mindfulness is a strategy for gradually turning
the client’s attention toward the fear (external and/or internal) as it is happening and exploring it in detail with increasing degrees of acceptance
• Gradual shift in client’s relationship to anxiety from avoidance to tolerance to acceptance
• Mindfulness is an awareness of, rather than thinking about, mental events - implying acceptance
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Acceptance & Mindfulness-based Approaches
• The overarching goal is to reorient clients away from maladaptive attempts to alter their thoughts and feelings, and toward making positive, sustained behavioural change that is consistent with one’s values & goals - essentially to live better rather than to think and feel better
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Current Questions ???
• Control approach vs. acceptance approach ?
• Can we integrate mindfulness/acceptance with CBT ???
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My Contact Details
Jonathan GastonDirector – Emotional Health ClinicCentre for Emotional HelathPhone: (02) 9850 8323Fax: (02) 9850 6578Mobile: 0407 221 334Email: [email protected]: Room 605, Building C3B