Social Anxiety Disorder (social phobia) is the third largest mental health care problem in the world today.
The latest government epidemiological data show social anxiety affects over 7% of the population at any given time. The lifetime prevalence rate (i.e., the chances of developing social anxiety disorder at any time during the lifespan) stands slightly above 13%.
Paradoxically, people with social anxiety want to make friends, be included in groups, and be involved and engaged in social interactions. But having social anxiety prevents people from being able to do the things they want to do. Although people with social anxiety want to be friendly, open, and sociable, it is fear (anxiety) that holds them back.
The latest government epidemiological data show social anxiety affects over 7% of the population at any given time. The lifetime prevalence rate (i.e., the chances of developing social anxiety disorder at any time during the lifespan) stands slightly above 13%.
Definition
Social anxiety is the fear of social situations that involve interaction with other people. You could say social anxiety is the fear and anxiety of being negatively judged and evaluated by other people.Perceptions
People with social anxiety are many times seen by others as being shy, quiet, backward, withdrawn, inhibited, unfriendly, nervous, aloof, and disinterested.Paradoxically, people with social anxiety want to make friends, be included in groups, and be involved and engaged in social interactions. But having social anxiety prevents people from being able to do the things they want to do. Although people with social anxiety want to be friendly, open, and sociable, it is fear (anxiety) that holds them back.
Triggering Symptoms
People with social anxiety usually experience significant distress in the following situations:- Being introduced to other people
- Being teased or criticized
- Being the center of attention
- Being watched or observed while doing something
- Having to say something in a formal, public situation
- Meeting people in authority ("important people/authority figures")
- Feeling insecure and out of place in social situations ("I don’t know what to say.")
- Embarrassing easily (e.g., blushing, shaking)
- Meeting other peoples’ eyes
- Swallowing, writing, talking, making phone calls if in public
This list is not a complete list of symptoms -- other symptoms may be associated with social anxiety as well.
Emotional Symptoms
The feelings that accompany social anxiety include anxiety, high
levels of fear, nervousness, automatic negative emotional cycles, racing
heart, blushing, excessive sweating, dry throat and mouth, trembling,
and muscle twitches. In severe situations, people can develop a
dysmorphia concerning part of their body (usually the face) in which
they perceive themselves irrationally and negatively.
Constant, intense anxiety (fear) is the most common symptom.
Insight
People with social anxiety typically know that their anxiety is
irrational, is not based on fact, and does not make rational sense.
Nevertheless, thoughts and feelings of anxiety persist and are chronic
(i.e., show no signs of going away). Appropriate active, structured,
cognitive-behavioral therapy is the only solution to this problem.
Decades of research have concluded that this type of therapy is the only
way to change the neural pathways in the brain permanently. This means that a permanent change is possible for everyone.
Seeking Help
Social anxiety, as well as the other anxiety disorders, can be
successfully treated today. In seeking help for this problem, we
recommend searching for a specialist -- someone who understands this
problem well and knows how to treat it.
Social anxiety treatment must include an active behavioral therapy
group, where members can work on their "anxiety" hierarchies in the
group, and later, in real-life situations with other group members.
Social anxiety is a fully treatable condition and can be overcome with effective therapy, work, and patience.
Therapy (Treatment)
Cognitive-behavioral therapy for social anxiety has been markedly
successful. Thousands of research studies now indicate that, after the
completion of social anxiety-specific CBT, people with social anxiety
disorder are changed. They now live a life that is no longer controlled
by fear and anxiety. Appropriate therapy is markedly successful in
changing people's thoughts, beliefs, feelings, and behavior. The person
with social anxiety disorder must be compliant and do what is necessary
to overcome this disorder.
National Institutes of Mental Health-funded studies report a very high
success rate using cognitive therapy with a behavioral therapy group.
Both are essential to alleviating anxiety symptoms associated with
social anxiety disorder.
Medication
Social anxiety medication is useful for many, but not all, people
with social anxiety disorder. For social anxiety, research indicates
use of the anti-anxiety agents, and (perhaps) certain antidepressants in
conjunction with CBT have proven most beneficial. Medication without
the use of active, structured cognitive-behavioral therapy has no
long-term benefits. Only CBT can change the neural pathway associations
in the brain permanently. The therapy used must "fit" the way the
human brain is structured.
Current research indicates many antidepressant medications for social
anxiety disorder to be useless, even in the short-term. About 15% of
our in-person socially-anxious people are helped by antidepressants.
Some of the large-scale medication studies for social anxiety have been
questioned and found to be skewed in favor of drugs marketed by
pharmaceutical companies, who paid for these studies to be done. These
kind of studies are conflicts-of-interest and their conclusions should
be thoroughly questioned.
In addition, each person is different, and there is no general rule
that works concerning social anxiety and medications. For a typical
person with social anxiety, who has an "average" amount of anxiety,
along the quantifiable continuum, we have found an anti-agent to be most
effective. However, not all people want or need medication. One of
the big changes in the last decade is the gradual non-use of medications
by people coming into active therapy for social anxiety. The majority
of people now choose not to use medications and to concentrate solely on
CBT.
Nevertheless, it is the cognitive-behavioral therapy that changes
the brain and allows you to overcome social anxiety. Medications can
only temporarily change brain chemistry.
Compliance with Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy
Cognitive-behavioral (rational) therapy is not difficult to do, and
has not been seen this way by participants. The first factor in not
complying with the therapy is that "I can't remember to do it every day"
and "I have a hard time committing to something in which I don't see
immediate results". The psychologist or group leader should have
time-tested solutions to these irrational arguments.
Prognosis
Prognosis is markedly good. People completing CBT training report a
high success rate, compared to control groups. In the National
Institute of Mental Health longitudinal studies, people continued to
report progress after CBT behavioral group therapy was over. Studies
repeatedly indicate that treatment compatibility (i.e., did the person
carry out the prescribed therapy?) is the key element in success. Using
different terminology, the social anxiety people who understand and
follow the directions to be repetitive with the therapy report the most
positive changes in lessening anxious feelings and thoughts. Repetition
and reinforcement of rational concepts, strategies, and methods (and
their implementation) is the key to alleviating social anxiety disorder
on a long-term basis.
Differential Diagnosis and Comorbidity
Social anxiety disorder is one of the five major anxiety disorders as listed in the DSM-IV.
Social anxiety is many times confused with panic disorder. People with
social anxiety do not experience panic attacks, in which the principal
fear is of having a medical problem (e.g., heart attack). People with
social anxiety realize that it is anxiety and fear that they are
experiencing. They may say things like "It was awful and I panicked!",
but, when questioned, they are talking about feeling highly anxious.
They are not talking about the fear of having a medical problem.
People with social anxiety do not go to hospital emergency rooms after
an anxiety situation. People with panic disorder many times go to
hospital emergency rooms, or doctor's offices, because they feel there
is something physically wrong with them.
High rates of alcoholism and other substance abuse, family difficulties
and problems, lack of personal relationships, and difficulty in
obtaining and continuing with employment are among the everyday problems
experienced by many people with social anxiety disorder.
A Big Problem
Lack of professional and knowledgeable therapists is the biggest
and most relevant problem to overcoming social anxiety. While it can be
done, and a vast amount of clinical and research evidence supports
this, overcoming social anxiety is difficult because of the scarcity of treatment facilities for people with this persistent anxiety disorder.
Often, we are led to the conclusion that effective therapy -- whether
from a psychologist or from a non-licensed person -- comes only from
people who have experienced this disorder themselves. Twenty years of
experience points to the fact that people who have lived with this
disorder and overcome it, make the best group leaders.
--Thomas A. Richards, Ph.D., Psychologist
President, Social Anxiety Association
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