Posts Tagged ‘Treating’

Modern Methods For Treating Anxiety Disorder

August 15th, 2011

Modern Methods For Treating Anxiety Disorder

Article by J. Michael Key

Treating anxiety disorders can be a complex process requiring one or more of several different therapy approaches. Only sufferers of recurring anxiety attacks know the impact of anxiety on their lives and how badly they want and need treatment. The long-term psychiatric process of exploring a patient’s past experiences to discover the cause is expensive and in most cases not justified. Today there are several proven successful methods for treating anxiety disorders, many of which can achieve results in as few as 5 visits (sometimes even fewer).

Relatives and acquaintances can be cruelly non-supportive of anxiety sufferers. Telling a sufferer ‘you’re imagining it’ or ‘get over it’ probably is not going to be at all helpful. Such comments actually deepen a sufferer’s misery and make it harder to take the step toward treating anxiety disorder with professional help. With this non-support from other people the anxiety sufferer begins to feel there are no real options. They may believe that treatments are expensive, time consuming and relatively ineffective. This is not true. The miseries of anxiety are avoidable. Treatments take many forms and results can be rapid in many patients. There are some effective self-help programs available for minimal cost.

Most sufferers of anxiety try to treat their anxiety by self-medication, commonly with alcohol, or by avoiding the situations that trigger attacks. Avoidance can actually lead to an increase in anxiety issues and alcohol has its own consequences. As long an anxiety trigger can be well defined and avoiding it has limited impact on day-to-day life the avoidance can have limited success. When anxiety is not focused on a well defined trigger or when quality of life is being degraded professional help is recommended.

The opportunities for resolving anxiety issues are readily available and the success rates are excellent. There is no reason to avoid treating anxiety disorders. In today’s medication-prone society the pharmaceutical approach is too frequently the first or only treatment. Drugs are good for symptomatic treatment and as an adjunct to other treatments but shouldn’t be a long-term solution. Behavior-based treatments can provide long-term (or permanent) relief without the side effects of drugs.

Two basic forms of behavior treatment are in common use. Cognitive-behavior anxiety treatment revolves around teaching the sufferer to recognize both the detonators of their anxiety and the thinking that inevitably lead to the anxiety attack. The patient can develop (on their own or with professional guidance) strategies to break the thought chains and move beyond the anxiety.

Exposure therapy is probably the better known of the two primary behavior-based treatments. The misconceptions surrounding exposure therapy often prevent anxiety sufferers seeking this form of help. Naturally, if you are plagued by an irrational fear of snakes, you do not want to pay someone to place a snake in your hands. This is not the way exposure therapy operates. In professionally controlled environments and with full support of a therapist the exposure is increased gradually over successive treatments until the patient is able to recognize, understand and control the fear responses that turn into anxiety.

Medications have excellent results when added to early stages of behavior therapy. This is especially true with exposure therapy where the drugs help the patient enter the treatments with out an existing anxiety level. Non-specific anxiety disorders are difficult to treat with exposure therapy – for obvious reasons. This type of anxiety requires a more intense cognitive therapy with longer duration medication therapy.

Since anxiety disorders affect so many people, doctors and therapists are always looking for new and more effective ways of treating anxiety disorders. Recent successes have been reported using exercise, relaxation methods, hypnosis and bio-feedback. There are numerous options available to sufferers and even if the first or second approach is not 100% successful there are many more treatment strategies available.

Michael Key has written for over 30 years on a wide variety of subjects. For more information on Information On Treating Anxiety Disorder visit Defeat Panic Attacks.










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New Method for Treating Anxiety Works When Conventional Treatments Fail

September 20th, 2010

San Francisco, CA (PRWEB) March 31, 2006

Stanford Engineer Gary Craig introduces a new technique to help the more than 19 million Americans who suffer from some kind of anxiety disorder.

Craig developed Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) as a self-help tool for people with emotional difficulties that were unresponsive to conventional medical and psychological treatment. People suffering with anxiety disorders (including panic attacks) were quick to report their success using EFT to reduce or eliminate longstanding anxiety issues.

“I have personally witnessed hundreds of cases where anxiety sufferers found instant relief from current attacks and long-term generalized anxiety” says Craig. According to Craig’s findings, unresolved emotional issues or past traumas cause a block or disruption in the subtle energies (Chi) of the body. It is these energy disruptions that cause the anxiety symptoms.

The reason that conventional treatments for anxiety are not working is because traditional psychologists and psychiatrists typically do not address their patients’ anxiety issues at the energy level. Instead they prescribe medication or therapy designed to help the patient cope with the anxiety.

“Anti-anxiety medication may keep a person from experiencing a full blown anxiety attack, but the reason for the anxiety is still there. If they don’t take the drugs they will have anxiety”, says Craig. “While there may be some exceptions to this, I haven’t seen any.”

EFT is a simple technique of tapping on specific acupuncture points while thinking about the issue. There is no talk therapy involved, no drugs, and anxiety sufferers do not have to be exposed to the anxiety-inducing environment or situation.

The healthcare costs associated with anxiety disorders are an estimated billion a year and include the cost of lost productivity in the workplace, lost wages and missed work. This does not take into consideration the cost of alternative or natural therapies and supplements that anxiety sufferers purchase in an effort to find a “cure” for their debilitating illness.

Craig says, “I would like to see Employee Assistance Programs cover the cost of EFT treatments for staff who are suffering from anxiety and panic, stress, and other illnesses like Irritable Bowel Syndrome that affect employee productivity and well-being.”

Paul Grey, a newcomer to EFT reports “I believe self administered EFT has cured me of a 15 year panic disorder.” Grey experienced high levels of generalized anxiety, panic attacks and agoraphobia. Grey tried standard talk therapy with a trained psychotherapist, and with a clinical psychologist. He tried hypnotherapy, counseling, Transcendental Meditation, muscle relaxation techniques and breathing exercises. He purchased books about panic and anxiety written by doctors and therapists. He also used two herbs: valerian and kava kava. He found some relief using kava, otherwise his panic and anxiety hadn’t shifted in 15 years.

Grey tried EFT because it was free. He reasoned that EFT’s inventor was not trying to get rich quick because he offered a free download of the EFT manual. After 15 years of trying to find relief from his anxiety, he was wary of charlatans.

In Grey’s words; “I studied the manual and started applying EFT for my current anxiety and my past anxiety. Within a day it was as if all the power of the attacks had gone and my general anxiety was at a zero. I have been testing myself by doing things that I have avoided for years. Like going to the gym. Using trains. Driving on motorways. My mind is sometime still on these problems. I have not been distracted. It’s just that the anxiety doesn’t come. I can even consciously worry a bit that it might, and it still doesn’t come. It’s as if it has been cut off at source.”

Anybody can learn to use EFT to halt the onset of an anxiety attack, or for long-term relief from generalized anxiety. Thousands of clinical reports show that anxiety sufferers experience relief about 80% of the time.

Over 225,000 people have downloaded Craig’s free training manual and another 5,000 to 10,000 download it each month. Known as The EFT Manual, it has been translated by volunteer practitioners into nine languages. The EFT website is the sixth most actively visited natural health site in the world.

The EFT Manual gives anyone all the basics so they can apply it right away. It can be freely downloaded at…

http://www.emofree.com/downloadeftmanual.asp?ref=prw-anxiety.

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