3. AGORAPHOBIA
Fear of being in places or situations from which escape
might be difficult, or in which help might not be
available
3
4. SPECIFIC PHOBIA
Specific phobia, or simple phobia, is an intense,
unreasonable, and persistent fear caused by the presence
or anticipation of a specific object or situation.
4
5. SUBTYPE OF SPECIFIC
PHOBIA
Phobias are classified into different subtypes.
Situational type: concerns a specific situation, such as
the fear of flying, bridges, elevators, driving, etc.
Blood-injection-injury type: also includes any
invasive medical procedure. This kind of phobia is
often associated with fear of seeing blood or wounds,
having injection and other medical procedures.
5
6. Natural environment type: fear of storms, heights, the
dark, water, etc.
Animal type: fear of insects, dogs, snakes, rodents,
spiders, etc.
Other type: phobias can be caused by a wide variety of
objects or situations that don’t fit the categories listed
above. These include a fear of choking, loud noises,
contracting an illness, vomiting, etc.
6
7. SOCIAL PHOBIA
Also known as social anxiety disorder, the person
becomes severely anxious to the point of panic or
incapacitation when confronting situations involving
people.
7
8. ONSET AND CLINICAL
COURSE
Life time prevalence of agoraphobia - 0.6 to 6%. half of
the agoraphobic patients have panic disorder.
Specific phobia is the most common mental disorder
among women and the second most common in men
Six months prevalence being 5 to 10 % females suffering
twice as compared to males
8
9. Six months prevalence for social phobia is about 2 to 3%
Age of onset is usually in childhood and adolescence
Onset is earliest in animal phobias, intermediate in social
phobias and latest in agoraphobia.
9
11. PSYCHOANALYTIC THEORIES
The anxiety is usually dealt with the defence
mechanism of repression. When repression fails to
function adequately, other secondary defence
mechanisms of ego come into action. In phobia, this
secondary defence mechanism is displacement.
11
12. BEHAVIOURAL FACTORS
Stimulus response model:- Anxiety is aroused by a
naturally frightening stimulus
Operant Conditioning Theory:- The conditioned
stimulus gradually loses its potency to arouse a response.
The symptom may last for years without any apparent
external reinforcement.
12
15. TREATMENT
Psychotherapy
Insight-oriented psychotherapy enables the patient to
understand the origin of the phobia, the phenomena of
secondary gain and the role of resistance, and enables the
patient to seek healthy way of dealing with anxiety
provoking stimuli.
15
18. ASSIGNMENT
Name and identify different phobias in detail and submit
it on 19.8.2015 before 4 pm. Minimum 20 phobias
should enlisted. Total mark is 20.
18
19. BIBLIOGRAPHY
TERESA L. SCHEID, TONY N. BROWN. A Handbook for the Study of
Mental Health, 2nd Ed. New York: Cambridge University Press; 2009.
Mary C. Townsend. Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Concepts of Care
in Evidence-Based Practice, 6th ed. Philadelphia: F. A. DAVIS
COMPANY; 2009.
Niraj Ahuja. A Short Textbook of Psychiatry, 7th Ed. New Delhi: Jaypee
Brothers Medical Publishers (P) Ltd; 2011.
19
20. Michael G. Gelder, Juan J. Lopez-Ibor, Nancy Andreasen, Jaun J.
Lopez-Idor. New Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry. New York: Oxford
University Press; 2003.
Sheila L. Videbeck. Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing, 5th ed.
China: Wolters Kluwer Health, Lippincott Williams & Wilkins; 2011.
20