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Reducing Anxiety and Altering Patterns of Avoidance

Thinking Style in Anxious Patients 

Predominant thinking patterns in Anxiety 

  1. Fears of harm and danger 
  2. Increased attention towards potential threats 
  3. Overestimation of the risk of situations 
  4. Automatic thoughts associated with danger, risk, uncontrollability, incapacity
  5. Underestimates of ability to cope with fearful situation 
  6. Misinterpretation of bodily stimuli 

Avoidance

CBT Model for Anxiety

  1. Unrealistic fear of objects or situations 
  2. A pattern of avoidance reinforces the belief that I cannot deal with the feared object or situation 
  3. The pattern of avoidance must be broken to overcome the anxiety. 

Behavioral Treatments

Assessment of symptoms, triggers, and coping strategies

  1. What is the event that triggers the anxiety? 
  2. What are the underlying automatic thoughts, cognitive errors, and schema involved in the overreaction to the feared stimulus?
  3. What is the emotional and psychological response? 
  4. Habitual behaviors such as avoidance?

Cognitive Errors

Techniques:

  1. Relaxation training: reducing muscle tension induces a state of relaxation and often results in reduced anxiety

2. Thought stopping: Stop negative thoughts and replace them with positive adaptive thoughts. 

3. Distraction: Develop several positive scenes that you can go to when anxious. Examples include walking in a nice park, going to your favorite restaurant, and spending time with friends/family 

4. Decatastrophizing: examine the evidenceto see that the likelihood of adverse outcomes is much less than we estimate

5. Deep Breathing

6. Exposure: systematically or all at once (flooding) exposing yourself to the feared object or situation. This is the most important part of CBT for anxiety. Systematic desensitization: graded exposure, starting with less anxiety provoking situations 

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