Transcript File
Chapter 5
Anxiety Disorders
Slides & Handouts by Karen Clay Rhines, Ph.D.
Seton Hall University
Anxiety
What distinguishes fear from anxiety?
• Fear is a state of immediate alarm in response to a
serious, known threat to one’s well-being
• Anxiety is a state of alarm in response to a vague
sense of threat or danger
• Both have the same physiological features:
increase in respiration, perspiration, muscle
tension, etc.
Slide 2
Anxiety
Is the fear/anxiety response useful/adaptive?
• Yes, when the fight or flight response is
protective
• No, when it is triggered by “inappropriate”
situations, or when it is too severe or long-lasting,
this response can be disabling
• Can lead to the development of anxiety disorders
Slide 3
Anxiety Disorders
Most common mental disorders in the U.S.
• In any given year, 19% of the adult population in
the U.S. experience one or another of the six
DSM-IV anxiety disorders
• Most individuals with one anxiety disorder suffer from
a second as well
Anxiety disorders cost $42 billion each year
in health care, lost wages, and lost
productivity
Slide 4
Anxiety Disorders
Six disorders:
• Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
• Phobias
• Panic disorder
• Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD)
• Acute stress disorder
• Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
Slide 5
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
(GAD)
Characterized by excessive anxiety under most
circumstances and worry about practically anything
• Vague, intense concerns and fearfulness
• Often called “free-floating” anxiety
• “Danger” not a factor
Symptoms include restlessness, easy fatigue,
irritability, muscle tension, and/or sleep disturbance
• Symptoms last at least six months
Slide 6
Generalized Anxiety Disorder
(GAD)
Symptoms are often misunderstood by others
• Sufferers are accused of “looking for” worries
The disorder is common in Western society
• Affects ~4% of U.S. and ~3% of Britain’s population
Usually first appears in childhood or adolescence
Women are diagnosed more often than men by 2:1
ratio
Various theories have been offered to explain the
development of the disorder…
Slide 7
GAD: The Sociocultural Perspective
GAD is most likely to develop in people faced with
social conditions that are truly dangerous
• Research supports this theory (example: Three Mile Island
in 1979)
One of the most powerful forms of societal stress is
poverty
• Why? Run-down communities, higher crime rates, fewer
educational and job opportunities, and greater risk for
health problems
• As would be predicted by the model, rates of GAD are
higher in lower SES groups
Slide 8
GAD: The Sociocultural Perspective
Since race is closely tied to income and job
opportunities in the U.S., it is also tied to the
prevalence of GAD
• In any given year, about 6% of African
Americans vs. 3.5% of Caucasians suffer from
GAD
• African American women have highest rates (6.6%)
Slide 9
GAD: The Sociocultural Perspective
Although poverty and other social pressures
may create a climate for GAD, other factors
are clearly at work
• How do we know this?
• Most people living in dangerous environments do not
develop GAD
• Other models attempt to explain why some people
develop the disorder and others do not…
Slide 10
GAD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Freud believed that all children experience anxiety
• Realistic anxiety when faced with actual danger
• Neurotic anxiety when prevented from expressing id
impulses
• Moral anxiety when punished for expressing id impulses
One can use ego defense mechanisms to control
these forms of anxiety, but when they don’t
work…GAD develops!
Slide 11
GAD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Some research does support the psychodynamic
perspective:
• People use defense mechanisms (especially repression)
when faced with danger
• People with GAD are particularly likely to use defense
mechanisms
• Children who were severely punished for expressing id
impulses have higher levels of anxiety later in life
Are these results “proof” of the model’s validity?
Slide 12
GAD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Not necessarily; there are alternative
explanations of the data:
• Discomfort with painful memories or “forgetting” in
therapy is not necessarily defensive
• Non-anxious people faced with threats may use
repression
• Some data contradict the model
• Many (if not most) GAD clients report normal
childhood upbringings
Slide 13
GAD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Psychodynamic therapies
• Use same general techniques for treating all
dysfunction
• Free association
• Therapist interpretation
• Specific treatments for GAD
• Freudians: focus less on fear and more on control of id
• Object-relations: help patients identify and settle early
relationship conflicts
Slide 14
GAD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Psychodynamic therapies
• Overall, controlled research has not consistently
shown psychodynamic approaches to be helpful
in treating cases of GAD
• Short-term dynamic therapy may be beneficial in some
cases
Slide 15
GAD: The Humanistic Perspective
Theorists propose that GAD, like other
psychological disorders, arises when people stop
looking at themselves honestly and acceptingly
This view is best illustrated by Carl Rogers’s
explanation:
• Lack of “unconditional positive regard” in childhood
leads to “conditions of worth” (harsh self-standards)
• These threatening self-judgments break through and cause
anxiety, setting the stage for GAD to develop
Slide 16
GAD: The Humanistic Perspective
Therapy based on this model is “client-centered” and
focuses on creating an accepting environment where
clients can “experience” themselves
• Although case reports have been positive, controlled
studies have only sometimes found client-centered
therapy to be more effective than placebo or no therapy
• Only limited support has been found for Rogers’s
explanation of causal factors
Slide 17
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Theorists believe that psychological problems
are caused by maladaptive and dysfunctional
thinking
Since GAD is characterized by excessive
worry (cognition), this model is a good
start…
Slide 18
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Theory: GAD is caused by maladaptive assumptions
• Albert Ellis identified basic irrational assumptions:
• It is a necessity for humans to be loved by everyone
• It is catastrophic when things are not as one wants them
• If something is dangerous, a person should be terribly concerned
and dwell on the possibility that it will occur
• One should be competent in all domains to be a worthwhile
person
• When these assumptions are applied to everyday life,
GAD may develop
Slide 19
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Aaron Beck is another cognitive theorist
• Those with GAD hold unrealistic silent
assumptions that imply imminent danger:
• Any strange situation is dangerous
• A situation/person is unsafe until proven safe
• It is best to assume the worst
• My security depends on anticipating and preparing
myself at all times for any possible danger
Slide 20
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Research supports the presence of these types
of assumptions in GAD
• Also shows that people with GAD pay unusually
close attention to threatening cues
Slide 21
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
What kinds of people are likely to have
exaggerated expectations of danger?
• Those whose lives have been filled with
unpredictable negative events
• To avoid being “blindsided,” they try to predict events;
they look everywhere for danger (and therefore see
danger everywhere)
• Theory still under investigation
Slide 22
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Two kinds of cognitive therapy:
• Changing maladaptive assumptions
• Based on the work of Ellis and Beck
• Teaching coping skills for use during stressful
situations
Slide 23
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Cognitive therapies
• Changing maladaptive assumptions
• Ellis’s rational-emotive therapy (RET)
• Point out irrational assumptions
• Suggest more appropriate assumptions
• Assign related homework
• Limited research, but findings are positive
• Beck’s cognitive therapy
• Similar to his depression treatment (see Chapter 8)
• Shown to be somewhat helpful in reducing anxiety to
tolerable levels
Slide 24
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Cognitive therapies
• Teaching clients to cope
• Meichenbaum’s self-instruction (stress inoculation)
training
• Teach self-coping statements to apply during four stages of a
stressful situation:
• Preparing for stressor
• Confronting and handling stressor
• Coping with feeling overwhelmed
• Reinforcing with self-statements
Slide 25
GAD: The Cognitive Perspective
Cognitive therapies
• Teaching clients to cope
• Shown to be of modest help for GAD and moderate
help with situational and more mild anxiety
• Best when used in combination with other treatments
Slide 26
GAD: The Biological Perspective
Theory holds that GAD is caused by
biological factors
• Supported by family pedigree studies
• Blood relatives more likely to have GAD (~15%)
compared to general population (~4%)
• The closer the relative, the greater the likelihood
• Issue of shared environment
Slide 27
GAD: The Biological Perspective
GABA inactivity
• 1950s – Benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax) found
to reduce anxiety
• Why?
• Neurons have specific receptors (lock and key)
• Benzodiazepine receptors ordinarily receive gammaaminobutyric acid (GABA, a common NT in the brain)
• GABA is an inhibitory messenger; when received, it causes a
neuron to STOP firing
Slide 28
GAD: The Biological Perspective
In the normal fear reaction:
• Key neurons fire more rapidly, creating a general state of
excitability experienced as fear or anxiety
• A feedback system is triggered; brain and body activities
work to reduce excitability
• Some neurons release GABA to inhibit neuron firing, thereby
reducing experience of fear or anxiety
• Problems with the feedback system are believed to cause
GAD
• Possible reasons: GABA too low, too few receptors, ineffective
receptors
Slide 29
GAD: The Biological Perspective
Promising (but problematic) explanation
• Other NTs also bind to GABA receptors
• Research conducted on lab animals raises
question: is “fear” really fear?
• Issue of causal relationships
• Do physiological events CAUSE anxiety? How can we
know? What are alternative explanations?
Slide 30
GAD: The Biological Perspective
Biological treatments
• Antianxiety drugs
• Pre-1950s: barbiturates (sedative-hypnotics)
• Post-1950s: benzodiazepines
• Provide temporary, modest relief
• Rebound anxiety with withdrawal and cessation of use
• Physical dependence is possible
• Undesirable effects (drowsiness, etc.)
• Multiply effects of other drugs (especially alcohol)
• 1980s: azaspirones (BuSpar)
• Different receptors, same effectiveness, fewer problems
Slide 31
GAD: The Biological Perspective
Biological treatments
• Relaxation training
• Theory: physical relaxation leads to psychological
relaxation
• Research indicates that relaxation training is more
effective than placebo or no treatment
• Best when used in combination with cognitive therapy
or biofeedback
Slide 32
GAD: The Biological Perspective
Biological treatments
• Biofeedback
• Uses electrical signals from the body to train people to control
physiological processes
• EMG is the most widely used; provides feedback about muscle
tension
• Once hailed as the approach that would change clinical treatment
• Found to be most effective when used as an adjunct to other
methods for the treatment of certain medical problems
(headache, back pain, etc.)
Slide 33
Phobias
From the Greek word for “fear”
• Formal names are also often from the Greek (see
Box 5-3)
Persistent and unreasonable fears of particular
objects, activities, or situations
Phobic people often avoid the object or
thoughts about it
Slide 34
Phobias
We all have some fears at some points in our
lives; this is a normal and common
experience
• How do phobias differ from these “normal”
experiences?
• More intense fear
• Greater desire to avoid the feared object or situation
• Distress which interferes with functioning
Slide 35
Phobias
Common in our society
• ~10% of adults affected in any given year
• ~14% develop a phobia at some point in lifetime
• Twice as common in women as men
Most phobias are categorized as “specific”
• Two broader kinds:
• Social phobia
• Agoraphobia
Slide 36
Specific Phobias
Persistent fears of specific objects or
situations
When exposed to the object or situation,
sufferers experience immediate fear
Most common: phobias of specific animals or
insects, heights, enclosed spaces,
thunderstorms, and blood
Slide 37
Specific Phobias
~9% of the U.S. population have symptoms in
any given year
• ~11% develop a specific phobia at some point in their
lives
Many suffer from more than one phobia at a time
Women outnumber men 2:1
Prevalence differs across racial and ethnic
minority groups
Slide 38
Social Phobias
Severe, persistent, and unreasonable fears of
social or performance situations in which
embarrassment may occur
• May be narrow – talking, performing, eating, or
writing in public
• May be broad – general fear of functioning
inadequately in front of others
• In both cases, people rate themselves as
performing less adequately than they actually did
Slide 39
Social Phobias
Can greatly interfere with functioning
• Often kept a secret
Affect ~8% of U.S. population in any given
year
Women outnumber men 3:2
Often begin in childhood and may persist for
many years
Fewer than 20% of sufferers seek treatment
Slide 40
What Causes Phobias?
All models offer explanations, but evidence
tends to support the behavioral explanations:
• Phobias develop through conditioning
• Once fears are acquired, they are continued
because feared objects are avoided
• Behaviorists propose a classical conditioning
model…
Slide 41
Classical Conditioning of Phobia
UCS
UCR
Entrapment
Fear
Running +
water
UCS
UCR
Entrapment
Fear
CS
CR
Running water
Fear
Slide 42
What Causes Phobias?
Behavioral explanations
• Phobias develop through modeling
• Observation and imitation
• Phobias are maintained through avoidance
• Phobias may develop into GAD when a person
acquires a large number of phobias
• Process of stimulus generalization: responses to one
stimulus are also produced by similar stimuli
Slide 43
What Causes Phobias?
Behavioral explanations have received some
empirical support:
• Classical conditioning study involving Little Albert
• Modeling studies
• Bandura, confederates, buzz, and shock
Research conclusion is that phobias CAN be
acquired in these ways, but there is no evidence that
this is how the disorder is ordinarily acquired
Slide 44
What Causes Phobias?
A behavioral-evolutionary explanation
• Some phobias are much more common than
others…
Slide 45
Slide 46
What Causes Phobias?
A behavioral-evolutionary explanation
• Theorists argue that there is a species-specific
biological predisposition to develop certain fears
• Called “preparedness”: humans are more “prepared” to
develop phobias around certain objects or situations
• Model explains why some phobias (snakes, heights)
are more common than others (grass, meat)
• Unknown if these predispositions are due to evolutionary or
environmental factors
Slide 47
How Are Phobias Treated?
All models offer treatment approaches
• Behavioral techniques (exposure treatments) are
most widely used, especially for specific phobias
• Shown to be highly effective
• Fare better in head-to-head comparisons than other
approaches
• Include desensitization, flooding, and modeling
Slide 48
Treatments for Specific Phobias
Systematic desensitization
• Technique developed by Joseph Wolpe
• Create fear hierarchy
• Sufferers learn to relax while facing feared objects
• Since relaxation is incompatible with fear, the relaxation
response is thought to substitute for the fear response
• Several types:
• In vivo desensitization (live)
• Covert desensitization (imaginal)
Slide 49
Treatments for Specific Phobias
Systematic desensitization
Flooding
• Forced non-gradual exposure
Modeling
• Therapist confronts the feared object while the fearful
person observes
Clinical research supports these treatments
• The key to success is ACTUAL contact with the feared
object or situation
Slide 50
Treatments for Social Phobias
Treatments only recently successful
• Two components must be addressed:
• Overwhelming social fear
• Address fears behaviorally with exposure
• Lack of social skills
• Social skills and assertiveness trainings have proved helpful
Slide 51
Treatments for Social Phobias
Unlike specific phobias, social phobias respond well
to medication (particularly antianxiety drugs)
Several types of psychotherapy have proved at least
as effective as medication
• People treated with psychotherapy are less likely to
relapse than people treated with drugs alone
• One psychological approach is exposure therapy, either in
an individual or group setting
• Cognitive therapies have also been widely used
Slide 52
Treatments for Social Phobias
Another treatment option is social skills
training, a combination of several behavioral
techniques to help people improve their social
functioning
• Therapist provides feedback and reinforcement
No single treatment approach is consistently
helpful or superior to the others
• Results from using a combination of approaches
seem to be most encouraging
Slide 53
Panic Disorder
Panic, an extreme anxiety reaction, can result
when a real threat suddenly emerges
The experience of “panic attacks,” however,
is different
• Panic attacks are periodic, short bouts of panic
that occur suddenly, reach a peak, and pass
• Sufferers often fear they will die, go crazy, or
lose control
• Attacks happen in the absence of a real threat
Slide 54
Slide 55
Panic Disorder
Anyone can experience a panic attack, but
some people have panic attacks repeatedly,
unexpectedly, and without apparent reason
• Diagnosis: panic disorder
• Sufferers also experience dysfunctional changes in
thinking and behavior as a result of the attacks
• Example: sufferer worries persistently about having an
attack; plans behavior around possibility of future attack
Slide 56
Panic Disorder
Often (but not always) accompanied by agoraphobia
• From the Greek “fear of the marketplace”
• Afraid to leave home and travel to locations from which
escape might be difficult or help unavailable
• Intensity may fluctuate
• There has only recently been a recognition of the link
between agoraphobia and panic attacks (or panic-like
symptoms)
Slide 57
Panic Disorder
Two diagnoses: panic disorder with agoraphobia;
panic disorder without agoraphobia
• ~2.3% of U.S. population affected in a given year
• ~3.5% of U.S. population affected at some point in their
lives
Likely to develop in late adolescence and early
adulthood
Women are twice as likely as men to be affected
Slide 58
Panic Disorder: The Biological
Perspective
In the 1960s, it was recognized that people with
panic disorder were not helped by
benzodiazepines, but were helped by
antidepressants
• Researchers worked backward from their
understanding of antidepressant drugs
Slide 59
Panic Disorder: The Biological
Perspective
What biological factors contribute to panic disorder?
• NT at work is norepinephrine
• Irregular in people with panic attacks
• Research suggests that panic reactions are related to changes
in norepinephrine activity in the locus ceruleus
• While norepinephrine is clearly linked to panic disorder,
what goes wrong isn’t exactly understood
• May be excessive activity, deficient activity, or some other defect
• Other NTs are likely involved
Slide 60
Panic Disorder: The Biological
Perspective
It is also unclear why some people have such
biological abnormalities
• Inherited biological predisposition is one possible
reason
• If so, prevalence should be (and is) greater among
close relatives
• Among monozygotic (MZ or identical) twins = 24%
• Among dizygotic (DZ or fraternal) twins = 11%
• Issue is still open to debate
Slide 61
Panic Disorder: The Biological
Perspective
Drug therapies
• Antidepressants are effective at preventing or reducing
panic attacks
• Function at norepinephrine receptors in the locus ceruleus
• Bring at least some improvement to 80% of patients with panic
disorder
• ~40–60% recover markedly or fully
• Require maintenance of drug therapy; otherwise relapse rates are
high
• Some benzodiazepines (especially Xanax (alprazolam))
have also proved helpful
Slide 62
Panic Disorder: The Biological
Perspective
Drug therapies
• Both antidepressants and benzodiazepines are also helpful
in treating panic disorder with agoraphobia
• Break the cycle of attack, anticipation, and fear
It is important to note that when drug therapy is
stopped, symptoms return
• Combination treatment (medications + behavioral
exposure therapy) may be more effective than either
treatment alone
Slide 63
Panic Disorder: The Cognitive
Perspective
Cognitive theorists and practitioners
recognize that biological factors are only part
of the cause of panic attacks
• In their view, full panic reactions are experienced
only by people who misinterpret bodily events
• Cognitive treatment is aimed at changing such
misinterpretations
Slide 64
Panic Disorder: The Cognitive
Perspective
Misinterpreting bodily sensations
• Panic-prone people may be overly sensitive to certain
bodily sensations and may misinterpret them as signs of a
medical catastrophe; this leads to panic
• Why might some people be prone to such
misinterpretations?
• Poor coping skills
• Lack of social support
• Unpredictable childhoods
• Overly protective parents
Slide 65
Panic Disorder: The Cognitive
Perspective
Misinterpreting bodily sensations
• Panic-prone people have a high degree of “anxiety
sensitivity”
• They focus on bodily sensations much of the time, are unable to
assess the sensations logically, and interpret them as potentially
harmful
• Examples include: overbreathing or hyperventilation, excitement,
fullness in the abdomen, acute anger, and heart “palpitations”
Slide 66
Panic Disorder: The Cognitive
Perspective
Cognitive therapy
• Attempts to correct people’s misinterpretations of their
bodily sensations
• Step 1: Educate clients
• About panic in general
• About the causes of bodily sensations
• About their tendency to misinterpret the sensations
• Step 2: Teach clients to apply more accurate interpretations
(especially when stressed)
• Step 3: Teach clients skills for coping with anxiety
• Examples: relaxation, breathing
Slide 67
Panic Disorder: The Cognitive
Perspective
Cognitive therapy
• May also use “biological challenge” procedures
to induce panic sensations
• Induce physical sensations which cause feelings of
panic:
• Jump up and down
• Run up a flight of steps
• Practice coping strategies and making more accurate
interpretations
Slide 68
The Cognitive Perspective
Cognitive therapy is often helpful in panic disorder
• 85% panic-free for two years vs. 13% of control subjects
• Only sometimes helpful for panic disorder with
agoraphobia
• At least as helpful as antidepressants
Combination therapy may be most effective
• Still under investigation
Slide 69
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Comprised of two components:
• Obsessions
• Persistent thoughts, ideas, impulses, or images that
seem to invade a person’s consciousness
• Compulsions
• Repeated and rigid behaviors or mental acts that
people feel they must perform in order to prevent or
reduce anxiety
Slide 70
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Diagnosis may be called for when symptoms:
• Feel excessive or unreasonable
• Cause great distress
• Consume considerable time
• Or interfere with daily functions
Slide 71
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
Classified as an anxiety disorder because
obsessions cause anxiety, while compulsions
are aimed at preventing or reducing anxiety
• Anxiety rises if obsessions or compulsions are
avoided
~2% of U.S. population has OCD in a given
year
Ratio of women to men is 1:1
Slide 72
What Are the Features of Obsessions
and Compulsions?
Obsessions
• Thoughts that feel intrusive and foreign
• Attempts to ignore or avoid them triggers anxiety
• Take various forms:
• Have common themes:
• Wishes
• Dirt/contamination
• Impulses
• Violence and aggression
• Images
• Orderliness
• Ideas
• Religion
• Doubts
• Sexuality
Slide 73
What Are the Features of Obsessions
and Compulsions?
Compulsions
• “Voluntary” behaviors or mental acts
• Feel mandatory/unstoppable
• Person may recognize that behaviors are irrational
• Believe, though, that catastrophe will occur if they don’t
perform the compulsive acts
• Performing behaviors reduces anxiety
• ONLY FOR A SHORT TIME!
• Behaviors often develop into rituals
Slide 74
What Are the Features of Obsessions
and Compulsions?
Compulsions
• Common forms/themes:
• Cleaning
• Checking
• Order or balance
• Touching, verbal, and/or counting
Slide 75
What Are the Features of Obsessions
and Compulsions?
Are obsessions and compulsions related?
• Most (not all) people with OCD experience both
• Compulsive acts often occur in response to
obsessive thoughts
• Compulsions seem to represent a yielding to
obsessions
• Compulsions also sometimes serve to help control
obsessions
Slide 76
What Are the Features of Obsessions
and Compulsions?
Are obsessions and compulsions related?
• Many with OCD are concerned that they will act
on their obsessions
• Most of these concerns are unfounded
• Compulsions usually do not lead to violence or
“immoral acts”
Slide 77
Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
OCD was once among the least understood of
the psychological disorders
In recent years, however, researchers have
begun to learn more about it
The most influential explanations are from the
psychodynamic, behavioral, cognitive, and
biological models…
Slide 78
OCD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Anxiety disorders develop when children come to
fear their id impulses and use ego defense
mechanisms to lessen their anxiety
OCD differs from anxiety disorders in that the
“battle” is not unconscious; it is played out in
explicit thoughts and action
• Id impulses = obsessive thoughts
• Ego defenses = counter-thoughts or compulsive actions
At its core, OCD is related to aggressive impulses and
the competing need to control them
Slide 79
OCD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
The battle between the id and the ego
• Three ego defenses mechanisms are common:
• Isolation: disown disturbing thoughts
• Undoing: perform acts to “cancel out” thoughts
• Reaction formation: take on lifestyle in contrast to unacceptable
impulses
• Freud believed that OCD was related to the anal stage of
development
• Period of intense conflict between id and ego
• Not all psychodynamic theorists agree
Slide 80
OCD: The Psychodynamic Perspective
Psychodynamic therapies
• Goals are to uncover and overcome underlying
conflicts and defenses
• Main techniques are free association and
interpretation
• Research evidence is poor
• In fact, psychodynamic therapy may be detrimental for
OCD by playing into the tendency to “think too much”
Slide 81
OCD: The Behavioral Perspective
Behaviorists concentrate on explaining and
treating compulsions
Although the behavioral explanation of OCD
has received little support, behavioral
treatments for compulsive behaviors have
been very successful
Slide 82
OCD: The Behavioral Perspective
Learning by chance
• People happen upon compulsions randomly:
• In a fearful situation, they happen to perform a particular act
(washing hands)
• When the threat lifts, they associate the improvement with the
random act
• After repeated associations, they believe the compulsion
is changing the situation
• Bringing luck, warding away evil, etc.
• The act becomes a key method to avoiding or reducing
anxiety
Slide 83
OCD: The Behavioral Perspective
Key investigator: Stanley Rachman
• Compulsions are rewarded by an eventual
decrease in anxiety
• Studies provide no evidence of the learning of
compulsions
Slide 84
OCD: The Behavioral Perspective
Behavioral therapy
• Exposure and response prevention (ERP)
• Clients are repeatedly exposed to anxiety-provoking stimuli and
prevented from responding with compulsions
• Therapists often model the behavior while the client watches
• Homework is an important component
• Treatment is offered in individual and group settings
• Treatment provides significant, long-lasting improvements for
most patients
Slide 85
OCD: The Cognitive Perspective
Cognitive theory and treatment for OCD is
very promising
• Includes a number of behavioral principles, and
thus has been called “cognitive-behavioral”
Slide 86
OCD: The Cognitive Perspective
Overreacting to unwanted thoughts
• People with OCD blame themselves for normal (although
repetitive and intrusive) thoughts and expect that terrible
things will happen as a result
• To avoid such negative outcomes, they attempt to neutralize their
thoughts with actions (or other thoughts)
• Neutralizing thoughts/actions may include:
• Seeking reassurance
• Thinking “good” thoughts
• Washing
• Checking
Slide 87
OCD: The Cognitive Perspective
When a neutralizing action reduces anxiety, it
is reinforced
• Client becomes more convinced that the thoughts
are dangerous
• As fear of thoughts increases, the number of
thoughts increases
Slide 88
OCD: The Cognitive Perspective
If everyone has intrusive thoughts, why do only
some people develop OCD?
• People with OCD:
• Are more depressed than others
• Have higher standards of morality and conduct
• Believe thoughts = actions and are capable of bringing harm
• Believe that they can and should have perfect control over their
thoughts and behaviors
Good research support for this model
Slide 89
OCD: The Cognitive Perspective
Cognitive therapies
• Used in combination with behavioral techniques
• May include:
• Habituation training
• Covert-response prevention
Slide 90
OCD: The Biological Perspective
Significant attempts have been made to
identify hidden biological factors that might
contribute to the development of OCD
• Research has led to promising theories and
treatments
Slide 91
OCD: The Biological Perspective
Two lines of research:
• Role of NT serotonin
• Evidence that serotonin-based antidepressants reduce OCD
symptoms
• Brain abnormalities
• OCD linked to orbital region of frontal cortex and caudate nuclei
• Compose brain circuit that converts sensory information into
thoughts and actions
• Either area may be too active, letting through troublesome
thoughts and actions
Slide 92
OCD: The Biological Perspective
Some research support and evidence that
these two lines may be connected
• Serotonin plays a very active role in the operation
of the orbital region and the caudate nuclei
• Low serotonin activity might interfere with the proper
functioning of these brain parts
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OCD: The Biological Perspective
Biological therapies
• Serotonin-based antidepressants
• Anafranil, Prozac, Luvox
• Bring improvement to 50–80% of those with OCD
• Relapse occurs if medication is stopped
• Research suggests that combination therapy
(medication + cognitive behavioral therapy
approaches) may be most effective
• May have same effect on the brain
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