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Panic Attacks in Cambridge
Panic
Attacks in Cambridge - The Hypnosis Clinic
Panic
attacks are common and can exist as a symptom on its own or they
can present as part of another condition. Sometimes Panic attacks
just develop, or panic attacks can develop as a learned behaviour
from family, times of severe stress at work, or specific seeding
events.
Dr James Rutherford works from the Frank Lee Centre on the Addenbrookes Hospital site.
The
following e-mail was received after two sessions!
"...
I'm glad to report that since the hypnotherapy sessions I haven't
experienced any more panic attacks, so I regard the the sessions
as a success."
In
as few as three sessions of hypnotherapy you can have back control,
be calm and relaxed.
For a discussion or to book an appointment.
Telephone Dr James Rutherford on
0779 210 82 72 or e-mail
Hypnotherapy
for panic attacks can be used to combat the symptoms, listed below.
To break habitual behaviours. Desensitise the sufferer from
stressors. Once under control look back at the original seeding
event in a dispassionate calm environment. Although therapy
can take several sessions a course of 3 sessions will alleviate
of major symptoms.
The symptoms
of Panic Attacks are
- Shortness of breath and smothering sensations.
- Choking sensations.
- Palpitations and elevated heart rate.
- Chest discomfort or pain.
- Sweating.
- Dizziness unsteady feelings or faintness.
- Nausea or abdominal distress.
- Depersonalisation or de-realisation.
- Numbness or tingling sensations.
- Flushes or chills.
- Trembling or shaking.
- A fear that the patient is dyeing, having a heart attack
or stroke.
- A fear the patient is going crazy or they are about to
do something uncontrolled.
In order
for a doctor to make a diagnosis of panic attack four or more of
these symptoms must present, develop quickly and reach a peak in
10 minutes.
Other
common conditions that are associated with panic attacks are agoraphobia,
social phobia, specific phobias.
Hypnosis can alleviate anxiety
by direct suggestion and by behavioural training both in trance
and using self hypnosis can alleviate anxiety and help break mind
loops of anxiety.
Hypnotherapy can remove anxiety triggers and be used to dissociate
you from these anxiety causing problems. Helping you regain
motivation and move forward to a higher quality of life.
Extreme Anxiety can cause panic attacks, blushing, profuse sweating,
trembling, and other symptoms of anxiety, including difficulty talking
and nausea, and over all feeling of dread or other stomach discomfort,
irregular heartbeat.
Work related stress Hypnosis can elevate the stress concerning,
performance, targets, a person or people at work who just demotivate
you, or just change totally that journey to work which is currently
wasted time. more information
The experience of anxiety can range from
mild uneasiness and worry to severe panic. At a reasonable level,
short bursts of anxiety can motivate us and enhance our performance.
If anxiety becomes too severe or chronic, however, it can become
debilitating.
Anxiety typically involves an emotional component
(e.g. fear, nervousness), a physical component (e.g. trembling,
dry mouth, heart racing, stomach churning) and a cognitive component
(frightening thoughts, e.g. I'm going to fail/make a fool of myself/loose
control). These can then affect our behaviour, for example by putting
off or stopping work, avoiding people, not sleeping, or drinking
too much.
To book an appointment or to discuss please contact [email protected] or
phone
0779 210 82 72
What is anxiety?
Anxiety
is a normal response to feeling threatened. People differ as to
how vulnerable they feel in different situations: this can be influenced
by past experiences as well as by the beliefs and attitudes they
hold about these situations.
Some
general situations which often cause anxiety include:
- leaving
home
- coping
with work and exams
- dealing
with relationships or the lack of relationships
- sexuality
issues
- preparing
to leave university.
- new
job
- moving
to new area
But
sometimes it is specific situations that are anxiety provoking
- apprehension
about going into new or social situations
- having
to deal with people in authority
- worrying
about whether you have chosen the right course or job
- panic
about preparing for and facing exams or making a presentation
- fears
about health.
The experience
of anxiety can range from mild uneasiness and worry to severe panic.
At a reasonable level, short bursts of anxiety can motivate us and
enhance our performance. If anxiety becomes too severe or chronic,
however, it can become debilitating.
Anxiety typically involves an emotional component (e.g. fear, nervousness),
a physical component (e.g. trembling, dry mouth, heart racing, stomach
churning) and a cognitive component (frightening thoughts, e.g. I'm
going to fail/make a fool of myself/loose control). These can then
affect our behaviour, for example by putting off or stopping work,
avoiding people, not sleeping, or drinking too much.
Mental Health and Society Lectures on Anxiety
You've probably been
introduced to the area already. Freud - anxiety can be adaptive
if it motivates people to learn new ways of approaching life's challenges.
Becomes a problem if we experience it in the absence of a visible
cause or in response to stimuli which others do not find anxiety
provoking.
Most
theories of anxiety begin with the autonomic nervous system, which
connects the central nervous system to the other organs of the body
and helps to regulate their functions, like breathing, heartbeat,
perspiration, blood pressure. The ANS is divided into two parts,
the sympathetic system and the parasympathetic system. When we appraise
a situation as fear-producing the sympathetic nervous system raises
heartbeat and respiration rate - the fight or flight response. The
parasympathetic nervous system on the other hand is involved in
returning our heartbeat and other functions to resting level.
People
differ in how the respond when anxious - some may sweat, others
may suffer a pounding heart and so forth, the exact profile of anxiety
reactions will differ for different people.
People
may also differ in terms of their readiness to become anxious. Anxiety
may be a personality trait (Spielberger,
1966; 1972; 1985) which might originate in constitutional
differences or be developed through early experiences. Anxiety may
also be a temporary state. Again, people differ in their tendency
to see situations as threatening. Walking through a forest may be
threatening for one but enjoyable for another. Changes through life
course may occur too. E.g. children are afraid of the dark but this
wears off in adulthood.
Appraisal:
In order for these responses to be activated we undertake some sort
of appraisal of the situation - a primary appraisal - if we appraise
it as threatening we may then go on to a secondary appraisal where
we assess whether we have the resources to deal with it (Lazarus
and Folkman, 1984)
In the
US anxiety disorders are relatively widespread, affecting 15-17%
of the adult population in any given year (Kessler et al, 1994;
Regier et al, 1993; Eaton et al, 1991; Blazer et al, 1991; Davidson
et al, 1991). Rovner (1993) estimated that the cost to the US economy
was $46.6 billion in 1990.
Anxiety
involves feelings of uncertainty, helplessness and physiological
arousal. Sometimes referred to as part of the group 'neuroses' -
characterised by anxiety, personal dissatisfaction and inappropriate
but not psychotic behaviour DSM IV groups them as 'anxiety disorders'.
Explanations
for anxiety disorders
1)
Cultural, social and environmental
People
in threatening situations are more likely to suffer mental health
problems, chief among them anxiety with exaggerated startle reactions,
sleep disturbance and specific fears and avoidance behaviour (Baum
and Fleming, 1993; Melick et al, 1993). In the aftermath of
the Three Mile Island nuclear accident researchers studied the psychological
impact on people living nearby and discovered that mothers of pre-school
children in the neighbourhood displayed five times the rate of anxiety
and depression disorders compared to mothers of comparable age in
comparable families outside the area. Although some of the symptoms
subsided the three mile island mothers were still showing elevated
rates of anxiety and depression a year later.
Anxiety
might be related to social change. The US population seems to
be showing increased rates of anxiety problems, e.g. Weissman et
al (1978) discovered rates of 1.4% for phobias and 2.5% for generalised
anxiety. By the 1990s these had increased to 11% and 3.8% respectively
(Regier et al, 1993; Blazer et al, 1991; Eaton et al, 1991). There
are higher rates of anxiety disorder in urbanised countries (Compton
et al, 1991; Hwu et al, 1989). With technological changes come some
new kinds of fears e.g. in a survey reported by Swingle, 1993) 55%
of Americans said they were afraid of using video recorders, answering
machines or walkmans and 32% said they were intimidated by computers
and were afraid of damaging the machine.
Poverty
is linked with anxiety disorders. Blazer et al (1993) discovered
that for those with incomes below $10,000 a year the rate
of anxiety disorders is twice what it is for those with higher incomes.
In the US this has also been tied to race. E.g. according to Belle
(1990) and Bennett (1987) African Americans have the highest rate
for generalised anxiety disorder (6% compared to 3.5% for whites).
African American women have much higher phobia rates (20%, as opposed
to 9% for whites) in any given year.
2)
Psychodynamic explanations
According
to Freud (e.g. 1917; 1933) we experience realistic anxiety when
we are confronted with a genuine external danger, whereas we experience
neurotic anxiety if we are prevented from expressing our id impulses.
Moral anxiety arises from our being threatened or punished for expressing
our id impulses, as a result of which these impulses themselves
come to be perceived as threatening. Specific fears result from
overuse of the defence mechanisms of repression,
where people push the feared object deeper and deeper into unconsciousness,
and displacement, where they attach the fear to otherwise neutral
objects. Generalised fear results from a breakdown of defence mechanisms,
perhaps where they have not been sufficiently developed in childhood.
More recently, object relations theory suggests that children with
strict or punitive parents come to fear being attacked by 'bad objects'
or losing 'good objects' (Cirese, 1993; Zerbe, 1990). Alternatively,
if parents do not treat children in a confident relaxed and supportive
manner the self will not develop appropriately and the child may
develop disintegration anxiety where the self is
perceived as lacking support and develop defensive processes to
safeguard their damaged self (Zerbe, 1990). These individuals may
be overwhelmed by the stress of adulthood and suffer from self
fragmentation (Diamond, 1987).
In support
of these psychodynamic positions, experimenters have manipulated
people's anxiety. For example Rosenzweig (1933; 1943) arranged for
subjects to fail half the problems on a test they believed was important.
They remembered less about the questions on which they failed. Luborsky
(1973) looked at transcripts of therapy sessions and showed that
people reacted to topics that they were anxious about by changing
the subject, forgetting what they were talking about and denying
negative feelings. In cultures where children are punished more,
adults seem to have more fears and anxieties (Whiting et al, 1966).
Where parents are overprotective, children seem to be more anxious
(Jenkins, 1968; Eisenberg, 1958). Some other studies have been less
supportive, for example Raskin et al (1982) looked at people presenting
with anxiety disorders and did not find a history of harsh discipline
or disturbed childhood behaviour
4)
Humanistic and existential explanations
These
propose that people become anxious when they have difficulty in
accepting themselves honestly and when their defensive postures
stop them looking at themselves with acceptance. When children fail
to receive unconditional positive regard from others they may become
overly critical of themselves and set themselves overly high self
standards. These conditions of worth mean that anxiety provoking
self judgments break through. Therapists then try to surround the
person in unconditional positive regard and create the conditions
whereby people can come to believe in themselves and stop evaluating
themselves unfavourably. This idea has received some support (Chodorkoff,
1954), but there has been little independent verification of humanistic
theories. By nature, humanistic therapists are skeptical of scientific
evaluations of their work.
According
to existentialists, people are governed by an existential anxiety,
a fear of the limits and responsibilities of human existence (Tillich,
1952). Existential analysts have suggested that people, in modern
technological competitive societies deny their fears and freedom
of choice and lead inauthentic lives, where they are overly concerned
with conforming to the standards of society (May, 1965; Bugenthal,
1965). Again, little systematic research has been conducted on this
perspective because of the belief of many such therapists that their
subject matter is not adequately captured by scientific research.
5)
Behavioural explanations - learning to fear.
In 1922
Bagby described a case where a child acquired a phobia (of running
water) as a result of an aversive experience. This appeared to reflect
the recently discovered principles of conditioning. This was part
of a search to find other ways in which fear could be learned. Watson
and Rayner (1920) and Little Albert acquiring a fear of rats and
Jones (1924) and Little Peter being conditioned out of his fear
of rabbits. With the development of social learning theory in the
1960s Bandura and Rosenthal (1966) argued that fear may be learned
from watching others being fearful. Once we have acquired
the fear we will tend to avoid the fear-producing object and
thus will experience a reduction in anxiety. Hence, we learn to
avoid the feared object.
Some
authors have detected specific instances where fears seem to arise
from unpleasant events (Ost, 1991; Merckelbach et al, 1991). Others
have not found this relationship (Marks, 1987; Keuthen, 1980), This
theory has been extended to include the idea of preparedness - that
evolution prepares us to be more afraid of certain objects, like
animals, darkness, heights etc. (e.g. Marks, 1977; Seligman, 1971).
6)
Cognitive explanations
Assume
that anxiety is caused by maladaptive assumptions. E.g. Ellis (1977;
1984) suggests that people are inclined to seek approval from everyone,
to despair if things are not the way they want them, and keep dwelling
on the possibility of fearsome events occurring. Hence people are
inclined to overreact and experience fear when confronted with new
life events. In a related theory, Beck describes how some people
constantly make assumptions that imply they are in immanent danger
(Beck & Greenberg, 1988). Experimental evidence has supported
some of the features of these models of anxiety. When people are
told to repeat to themselves anxiety provoking statements they show
more respiratory changes and emotional arousal (Rimm & Littvak,
1969). Beck et al (1974) found that people suffering from free floating
anxiety reported negative assumptions and automatic thoughts about
physical injury, Illness or death; mental illness; psychological
impairment or loss of control, failure or inability to cope; and
rejection, depreciation and domination.
Cognitive
theorists believe that people whose lives have been punctuated by
unpredictable negative events are more likely to be vigilant in
trying to predict what may go wrong in the world around them and
be inclined to interpret ambiguous stimuli as threats (Pekrun, 1982).
People in laboratory studies respond more fearfully to unpredictable
or un-warned negative events compared to predictable ones or those
which they are warned about (Weinberg and Levine, 1980).
7)
Biological explanations
These
have concentrated on the kinds of neurotransmitters and subsystems
of the brain involved in anxiety states. Like many other 'mental
disorders', important clues emerged through observation of the action
of drugs. Benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax and Librium) were observed
to reduce anxiety in the 1950s and the development of brain scanning
techniques in the 1970s helped researchers to pinpoint that these
drugs seemed to be most active in the hypothalamus and limbic system,
in binding to receptor sites (remember what we did about neurotransmitters
and their receptors a few weeks ago?) (e.g. Gray, 1987; Costa, 1985;
Hollister, 1982).
The
benzodiazepines bind to receptors which are designed to receive
the neurotransmitter GABA (gamma amino butyric acid). GABA is an
inhibitory neurotransmitter - it makes the neuron receiving it less
likely to 'fire'. The elevated rate of neural firing in fear reactions
is believed to be brought back to resting level by the GABA producing
neurons which inhibit the cells which receive them from firing.
Perhaps
people with anxiety disorders do not have a working GABA feedback
system, e.g. by not secreting enough GABA, by secreting other chemicals
which interfere with the action of GABA or having GABA receptors
which do not readily bind to the neurotransmitter. Benzodiazepines
act on GABA receptors and increase their ability to bind GABA (Leonard,
1992; Costa and Guidotti, 1979)
This
explanation is not complete, as it is known that a number of chemicals,
not just GABA, can bind to GABA receptors (Bunney and Garland, 1981).
GABA is used very widely in the brain - about 40% of neurons can
secrete GABA, so which ones are responsible?
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Second part of anxiety disorders
Some
of the more noteworthy instances are:
1)
Generalised or free floating anxiety. Diffuse vague unpleasant
feeling of fear and apprehension. Worries about unknown dangers
or risks inherent in everyday events. Symptoms may include rapid
heart rate, loss of breath, loss of appetite, sweating, fainting,
diarrhoea, nausea, frequent urination, tremors. With f-f anxiety,
there's no obvious cause of the worry, nor is it easily attributed
to recent life experience. The symptoms are i) Motor tension
muscle tension, shakiness, inability to relax, strained facial expression,
easily startled ii) Autonomic reactivity sympathetic and parasympathetic
activity contributing to the physical symptoms, heart, stomach respiration,
sweating. iii) Apprehensive feelings about the future. iv) Hypervigilance
scan the environment for dangers. Related to the hyperaroused state.
Generalised
anxiety is defined as a disorder that does not involve a lack of
contact with reality.
2)
Panic disorder Like anxiety but intense and sudden. Periods
of intense anxiety interspersed with normal functioning. symptoms
similar to anxiety but may also include chest pains and palpitations.
Some psycho sensory symptoms - distortion of light intensity, sound
intensity, strange feeling in stomach, sensations of floating, turning,
moving, feelings of unreality or loss of self identity. Attacks
may be several seconds, a few hours or even days long. People with
panic attacks may develop anxiety that they're about to suffer an
attack, particularly in embarrassing situations, in public.
3)
Phobias - Phobos Greek god of fear. Specific fear or anxiety,
about a particular object or situation. Fears may not be linked
to likelihood of happening e.g. more traffic accident fatalities
than violent crime victims but more people worry about crime than
car accidents (Sarason and Sarason, 1989). Fear may occur even if
the phobic person imagines the object or situation. Phobias may
develop gradually without there being a specific event or situation
which sets it off. Some e.g. fear of cats, cars, staircases are
part of everyday life to most of us; others e.g. fear of snakes,
heights, pain are felt to some degree by most people. Torgensen
(1979) typology of phobias from study of phobic patients:
i) separation
fears - crowds, traveling alone, being alone at night.
ii)
Animal fears - mice, rats, insects, spiders
iii)
Mutilation fears - open wounds, operations, blood or bleeding.
iv)
Social fears - speaking in public, being watched.
v) Nature
fears - heights, mountains, cliffs, the sea.
Sometimes
people develop cumbersome ways of dealing with phobias, subway woman
etc. avoiding phobia object. Most common phobias are about things
that could really be dangerous (McNally, 1987). Maybe evolutionary
e.g. fear of snakes more common than fear of electricity. Tend to
be grouped into three categories, namely
i) Simple
phobias - fear of a specific object like spiders or claustrophobia.
Therapy might involve promoting associations between fear arousing
stimuli and non anxiety responses.
ii)
Social phobias fear and embarrassment in dealing with others. People
may fear that the signs of their embarrassment may show to others,
trembling, stuttering, blushing. May involve fear of asserting oneself,
fear of making a mistake and fear of public speaking. May involve
people feeling inadequate and having social and interpersonal inadequacies.
Marks (1987) some techniques for dealing with social phobia. i)
Respond to anxiety symptoms by approach rather than withdrawal.
ii) Greet people properly with eye contact. iii) Listen carefully
to people and make a mental list of possible topics of conversation.
iv) Show that you want to speak, initiate conversation asking questions
etc. v) Speak up without mumbling. vi) Tolerate some silences vii)
Wait for cues from others in deciding where to sit, when to pick
up a drink and what to talk about viii) Learn to tolerate criticism
by introducing controversy deliberately at an appropriate point.
4)
Agoraphobia. Literally fear of the market place. More generally
fear of entering unfamiliar situations. May involve fear of leaving
home or secure setting. May deteriorate or improve and object of
fear may change. Agoraphobics can be divided into those who suffer
panic attacks and those who don't. Agoraphobia can develop from
panic attacks, because patients associate the panic with the situation
in which it occurs. Ag. is sometimes associated with clinging dependent
personality (Gittelman and Klein, 1984) and separation anxiety in
childhood.
5)
Obsessive compulsive disorders Obsessive people are unable to
get an idea out of their minds. Compulsive people feel compelled
to perform a particular act over and over. E.g. Lady Mac Beth and
hand washing. Obsessions may involve doubt, hesitation fear of contamination
or fear of one's own aggression. Compulsive behaviour may involve
counting, ordering, washing etc. Sometimes purely cognitive, e.g.
to prevent bad things happening recite series of words to self.
Some people have obsessive thoughts but do not act on them, others
have obsessive thoughts which lead to compulsive behaviour and a
very few have compulsive behaviour without related obsessive thoughts.
Obsessive compulsive people can be very cautious. O-C problems usually
characterised by i) The obsession or compulsion intrudes insistently
and persistently into the individual's awareness ii) A feeling of
anxious dread intrudes if the thought or act is prevented for some
reason. iii) The obsession or compulsion is experienced as foreign
to oneself as a psychological being. iv) The individual recognises
the obsession as absurd or irrational but can't do anything about
it. v) Individual feels a need to resist it. O-C people may be very
indecisive. O-C rituals may involve i) checking e.g. taps, locks
ii) Cleaning or cleanliness iii) Slowness iv) Doubting own competence
and conscientiousness. These tendencies increase during periods
of stress. Obsessional thoughts can occur in psychotic behaviour,
but in the latter cases people are more detached from reality. O-C
problems are like phobias in that both involve anxiety. Sometimes
associated with interpersonal problems.
6)
Hysteria. Originally treated by Charcot in C19th. Organic complaints
for which no organic cause had been found. Complaints of e.g. loss
of sensation in the skin, pains, blindness, paralysis, tics, muscular
contractions and seizures. Often accompanied by what Charcot called
'la belle indifference' - Patients did not seem to be concerned
about their condition. Also, hysterical patients had their on theories
about bodily functioning and the symptoms were compatible with these
theories. Charcot used hypnosis an suggested to patients while they
were in the trance that their symptoms would disappear - considerable
success. Influenced Freud and Pinel. Pinel extended Charcot's work
and believed that the onset of the hysterical symptoms was related
to an upsetting event and that if patients expressed these feelings
the symptoms could be relieved. In US now called somatoform disorder.
Somatoform disorder includes i) Psychogenic pain disorder - pain
without or in excess of what would be expected from organic symptoms.
May be to do with trying to get attention from others or associated
with actual or threatened interpersonal loss. ii) Hypochondriasis
- where people show unrealistic fear of disease despite reassurance
that his or her social or occupational functioning is not impaired.
May include obsessive preoccupation with bodily organs and worry
about health. Tend to misunderstand the nature of physiological
activity and exaggerate symptoms when they occur (Kellner, 1987).
iii) Somatization disorder involves multiple somatic complaints,
often chronic, sometimes called Briquet's syndrome. Headaches, fainting,
nausea, vomiting, abdominal pains, bowel trouble, menstrual and
sexual problems, allergies. May induce doctors to perform operations.
Woodruff et al (1974) compared 50 somatizing patients and 50 normal
controls and found that three times as much body tissue had been
removed from somatizing patients. S-D's usually accompanied by difficulties
in social relationships, exaggerated displays of emotion and self-centred
attitude. iv) Conversion disorders involve complaints by patients
that they have lost all or part of some bodily function. Does not
seem to be under voluntary control. Symptoms often follow stressful
event. Psychoanalysis suggests that the symptom represents an underlying
conflict. Sometimes symptoms conflict with medical knowledge, e.g.
glove anaesthesia, where patients claim to have lost sensation in
their hands, very unlikely neurologically. (But carpal tunnel syndrome??)
Episodes may follow upsetting or challenging events. Symptoms may
allow person to escape the aversive stimuli or get sympathy. Group
hysteria also possible where people who live and work together may
suffer similar symptoms.
Changing
the subject a bit we have Stress Inoculation training.
Based on the work of Ellis (1973) - Rational Emotive Therapy - people
have problems because they feel it is necessary always to be totally
competent, that they have no control over their feelings, that they
must rely on others who are stronger, or that they cannot overcome
their past misfortunes. As a result suffer self hatred, hostility,
sense of worthlessness and inadequacy. RET tries to replace these
beliefs with more positive methods of self evaluation. SIT gets
client/patient to talk to him/herself differently about the problem.
Several phases i) educational phase in which patient is encouraged
to analyse problem rather than just panic. Told that fear involves
a) physiological arousal and b) anxiety engendering thoughts, images
and self statements. Get client to re-label the physical sensations
as e.g. eagerness to demonstrate competence. Result is a change
to a sense of learned resourcefulness instead of learned helplessness.
The shift in cognitions may in itself lead to a shift in autonomic
functions. Client is instructed in the application of specific phrases
and skills. Practice and rehearsal. Instruction in muscle relaxation
too. Example: Mucous colitis (Youell & McCullough, 1975). Client
keep a record of the attacks and note the events that occurred prior
to each attack. Majority of patients attacks seemed to occur after
negative interpersonal encounter. Instructed to approach individuals
who created these negative feelings and ask them if this is how
they intended her to understand the transaction. Later in the therapy
the client was asked to do concurrent hypothesis testing. Attacks
declined over a 50 week period.
References
Bakal,
D. (1979) 'Psychology and medicine' London: Tavistock.
Ellis,
A. (1973) 'Humanistic Psychotherapy' New York: Julian Press.
Gittelman,
R. & Klein, D.F. (1984) 'Relationships between separation anxiety
and panic and agoraphobic disorders' Psychopathology (Supplement)
vol. 17 ps 65-65.
Marks,
I.M. (1987) 'Fears Phobias and rituals: Panic, anxiety and their
disorders' New York: Oxford University Press.
McNally,
R.J. (1987) 'Preparedness and Phobias: A review' Psychological Bulletin
vol. 101 ps283-303.
Meichenbaum,
D, (1976) 'Towards a cognitive theory of self control' In Schwartz,
G.E. & Shapiro, D. (Eds) 'Consciousness and self regulation:
Advances in research' vol. 1 New York: Plenum.
Sarason,
I.G. & Sarason, B.R. (1989) 'Abnormal Psychology' Englewood
Cliffs N.J.: Prentice Hall
Torgersen,
S. (1979) 'The nature and origin of common phobic fears' British
Journal of Psychiatry, vol. 134 ps 343-351.
Woodruff
,R.A. Jr, Godwin, D.W. & Gruze, S.B. (1974) 'Psychiatric Diagnosis'
New York: Oxford University Press.
Youell, K.J. & McCullough,
J.P. (1975) 'Behavioural treatment of mucous colitis' Journal of
consulting and clinical psychology vol. 43 ps 740-745.
Hypnosis can be used to teach people self hypnosis to relax, feel
refreshed and more confident.
Hypnosis can be used to boost the ego and levels of self confidence.
To cope with those targets.
Hypnosis can be used to make those journeys to work or the next client
enjoyable and productive.
Phobia's However irrational the fear, that fear or anxiety
is real to the sufferer.
Animals
Heights
Flying
Exams
Social contact (Dating)
Open spaces
Closed spaces
Crowds
Clinical conditions Contact the hypnosis clinic for a discussion.
Including: Bruxism (teeth grinding),
snoring, nail biting
Weight loss Diets are a short term fix, life style has to change
for weight loss to be permanent.
Work related stress It cannot cure but it can elevate the stress
concerning, performance, targets, a person or people at work
who just demotivate you, or just change totally that journey to work
which is currently wasted time. more information
Exam nerves, No replacement for learning but reduce panic, and
help in remembering those facts.
Memory enhancement, Improve your ability to recall facts and
dates objects.
To book an appointment or to discuss please contact [email protected]
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