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Social Anxiety and It’s Treatment

Social Anxiety and It’s Treatment. David M Clark Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London. Anxiety and Anxiety Disorders. Anxiety is a survival mechanism Motivator and sometimes life saver with real dangers Problematic when danger is imagined

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Social Anxiety and It’s Treatment

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  1. Social Anxiety and It’s Treatment David M Clark Institute of Psychiatry, Kings College London

  2. Anxiety and Anxiety Disorders • Anxiety is a survival mechanism • Motivator and sometimes life saver with real dangers • Problematic when danger is imagined • Anxiety Disorder diagnosed when anxiety is out of proportion to the danger, is persistent, and disabling. One year prevalence: 17% Cost $42 billion per year (US, 1990s).

  3. Social Phobia(Social Anxiety Disorder) • Most common anxiety disorder (12 % prevalence) • Persistent fear of social or performance situations. Individual fears he/she will act in a way which will be humiliating or embarrassing. • Fear recognised as excessive or unreasonable • Feared situations are avoided or endured with intense distress

  4. Characteristics and Consequences • Typically childhood onset (median 13 yrs). • Low natural recovery rate (Bruce et al 2005: 37% over 12 years). • Increased risk of suicide, alcohol & drug abuse, depression, other anxiety disorders. • Marked under-achievement • Low treatment seeking rates

  5. Typical Thoughts What I say sounds stupid I’m boring I will make a fool of myself They don’t like me They’ll see I’m anxious I won’t have anything to say I’ll blush/shake/lose control

  6. Existing Treatments Medication • MAOI (phenelzine) • SSRIs (paroxetine, sertraline, fluvoxamine, fluoxetine) (effective in short-term but problematic relapse ) Psychological • Exposure therapy • Group cognitive-behavior therapy (effective in short-term & gains well-maintained ) BUT less than 50% recover.

  7. Clark & Wells (1995) SOCIAL PHOBIA PERSISTS DUE TO: • shift to internal focus of attention • use of internal information to infer how one appears to others • safety behaviors

  8. Social Situation Activates assumptions Perceived social danger Processing of Self as a Social Object Safety Behaviours Somatic & cognitive symptoms

  9. Mansell, Clark & Ehlers (2003) Do high socially anxious individuals have an internal attentional bias? High vs Low Socially Anxious Students Detect external and internal probes Threat vs No Threat Source: Behaviour Research & Therapy, 41, 555-572.

  10. External vs Internal Focus of Attention

  11. Hackmann, Surawy & Clark (1998) Do patients with social phobia experience negative, observer perspective images when anxious in social situations? Structured interview. Frequency, content & perspective of spontaneous imagery

  12. % Negative, distorted, observer perspective images

  13. Link between date of memory and onset of social phobia

  14. Wells, Clark, Salkovskis et al (1995) Do safety behaviours prevent cognitive change? Exposure with safety behaviours VS Exposure without safetybehaviours

  15. Improvement

  16. New Cognitive Treatment • Derive idiosyncratic version of model • Self-focussed attention/safety behaviours experiment • Video feedback • Shift attention to social situation • Behavioural Experiments • Construct veridical image of social self

  17. “I’ll sound stupid” Self-Conscious Image of self • looking very strange • twisted mouth and rigid • feel different and apart Safety BehavioursAnxious Delay asking, take deep breaths uncomfortable, Speak quickly, mumble, hand over sweaty palms, mouth, rehearse what about stiff muscles, to say, check memory for what mind goes blank, I have just said

  18. New Cognitive Treatment • Derive idiosyncratic model • Self-focussed attention/safety behaviours experiment • Video feedback • Shift attention to social situation • Behavioural Experiments • Construct veridical image of social self

  19. Attention and Safety Behaviours Experiment • Difficult social interaction (twice) Focus on self & safety behaviours versus Focus externally & no safety behaviours • Compare subjective anxiety, catastrophes, performance

  20. Video and Audio Feedback shows true observable self but can continue to process internal information or discount accuracy of image therefore run “mental” video first and operationalise conspicuousness of negative behaviours can help patient drop safety behaviours by showing they are more observable than feared symptoms

  21. New Cognitive Treatment • Derive idiosyncratic model • Self-focussed attention/safety behaviors experiment • Video feedback • Shift attention to social situation • Behavioral Experiments • Construct veridical image of social self

  22. Interrogating the Social Environment • Behave in “unacceptable” fashion and observe others’ response (WIDEN BANDWIDTH) - pause in speech, umms and ahs - damp armpits - shake/spill drink - wear blusher - disagree/express opinion - ignore acquaintance 2. Conduct surveys 3. Articulate and discount imaginary critic

  23. Social Phobia Trial 1(Clark, Ehlers et al, J. Consult. Clin. Psychol. 2003, 71, 1058-1067)

  24. Social Phobia Trial 2 (Clark, Ehlers et al. in press)

  25. Trial 3 (Mortberg, Clark et al. in press)Stockholm

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