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  #1  
Old Jun 24, 2004, 04:01 PM
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Butterfly_Faerie Butterfly_Faerie is offline
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Location: Ontario, Canada
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<font color=red><pre>Exposure Therapy </pre>

</font color=red>

Treatment of various anxiety disorders with exposure therapy or desensitization has, over recent years, proven to be the most effective from the viewpoint of lasting success. It is used as part of a cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) program in both individual and group formats, but is also quite often self-administered by determined individuals who are highly motivated to master their individual phobias. It is highly effective, with of without medication, in treating agoraphobia and social phobia, statistically reducing anxiety in 75 per cent of all cases, with controlled studies indicating that the effects are generally maintained long-term.

As part of CBT treatment, exposure therapy is preceded by cognitive restructuring, which is subsequently practised along with exposure therapy, to systematically challenge the automatic interpretation of excessive danger that the specific fears have been creating. Cognitive therapy replaces this mindset with interpretation in line with the realistic danger levels of the situation, if there are any.


<font color=purple>Graduated approach </font color=purple>

Exposure therapy is, in itself, anxiety provoking causing anxiety levels to rise - racing heart, shortness of breath, worrying thoughts, unwanted memories, etc. - depending on the anxiety disorder involved. However, it must be faced in order to unlearn the belief that the feared situation will result from the activity, to consistently reduce the habitual emotional reaction and to emphasize the newly learned interpretation of the actual danger level involved in the activity. Naturally all this is very scary, so it is best to start with a situation which currently provokes only mild anxiety, successfully overcome it and move on to one which causes greater anxiety. The ultimate goal is to learn that the feared situations are not the dangerous threats they are expected to be. This means that all the avoidance procedures, the escape hatches and other safety valves, that have been contrived over time too deal with the fear, have to go. This is the only way to ensure that the mind interprets the situation as “not so scary after all” - as opposed to “it wasn’t so bad because such-and-such prevented it”. The fear has to be faced down and escaping or avoiding the peeking anxiety will create cognitive reasoning that the avoidance or escape strategy was helpful when it is really the barrier to success. Remaining in the feared situation and allowing the anxiety to peek allows for the consequent decreasing fear to be experienced so that the next time, there is less anxiety and the next time, even less. The feared situation must be regularly confronted in order to consistently confirm the cognitive restructuring which has put the danger into perspective. Slow breathing and rational thinking techniques must replace the avoidance and escape habits that have developed.

<font color=purple>Virtual reality </font color=purple>

A new variation of exposure therapy is virtual reality exposure therapy (VRET) which, understandably, is especially effective for specific phobias. Success is also being reported for social phobia, agoraphobia and panic disorder. As in standard exposure therapy, relaxation techniques and cognitive restructuring need to be mastered before exposure is undertaken. However exposure therapy, in the case of VRET, takes place, in the therapists office - not in a public place, but in a computer generated world of feared situations. A head-mounted display with a television monitor and stereo earphones provide the visual and auditory triggers to the phobic reactions. These are presented using previously agreed upon increasingly more anxiety- producing situations or activities.

<font color=purple>Multi-disorder group therapy </font color=purple>

The current theory that all anxiety disorders are rooted in a similar distorted cognizance of the level of danger that individual situations present and from which consequent avoidance behaviour develops, has led to the development of a cost-effective and resource-coordinating program for treating people with different anxiety disorders in a single group therapy setting. Such an exposure based program has been developed by Peter J. Norton, Ph.D., an Assistant Professor of Psychology at the University of Houston and a well-known and published anxiety disorder researcher. His format incorporates education and relaxation, with cognitive restructuring and exposure therapy which is tailored to the specific fear. Limited test studies have been carried out, proving the program to be effective for the study participants, and future studies are scheduled.

<font color=blue>Here is a great website on Anxiety, great articles to read.</font color=blue>

http://designandcopy.ca/lifeline/current.html#exposure

<font color=blue>I personally have done this with anxiety, and still do it to this day, and it does help. </font color=blue>



<font color=red>~Sundance~</font color=red>

<font color=blue>"Never react emotionally to criticism. Analyze yourself to determine whether it is justified. If it is, correct yourself. Otherwise, go on about your business."</font color=blue>

<font color=black>Norman Vincent Peale</font color=black>
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Exposure Therapy- Treatment For Anxiety Disorders




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  #2  
Old Jun 24, 2004, 05:59 PM
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SunshineGold03 SunshineGold03 is offline
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Member Since: Jan 2004
Location: RI, USA
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Hey Sundance,
I can't seem to get the link to work for me. Maybe somebody could get it to work for me.

Jenn
  #3  
Old Jun 24, 2004, 06:45 PM
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Peanut61 Peanut61 is offline
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Hi Sundance: This is what worked for me. Start in one area, (I started going to a gym right down the street), and build on successes.

I've had to 'ride out' several panic attacks, but it's been doable and worth it for not being trapped in my house, (which I was for a solid year).

Warmest regards, Peanut

<font color=blue>HI FROM PEANUT</font color=blue> Exposure Therapy- Treatment For Anxiety Disorders
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Exposure Therapy- Treatment For Anxiety Disorders
  #4  
Old Jun 25, 2004, 09:00 AM
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Butterfly_Faerie Butterfly_Faerie is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2004
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Here Girl, Try this link it worked for me, I guess I should have checked it for a broken link ... hehehe

<A target="_blank" HREF=http://designandcopy.ca/lifeline>http://designandcopy.ca/lifeline</A>

You will just have to scroll down until you see exposure therapy.

<font color=red>~Sundance~</font color=red>

<font color=blue>"Never react emotionally to criticism. Analyze yourself to determine whether it is justified. If it is, correct yourself. Otherwise, go on about your business."</font color=blue>

<font color=black>Norman Vincent Peale</font color=black>
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Exposure Therapy- Treatment For Anxiety Disorders



  #5  
Old Jun 25, 2004, 09:08 AM
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Butterfly_Faerie Butterfly_Faerie is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2004
Location: Ontario, Canada
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I was housebound for longer when i was 15-16.. even at 17... I was a hermit pretty much for nearly a year living in my room in my pajama's sleeping all the time. Until I went to my psychiatrist for the first time at age 16 and started therapy I didn't know what was happening to me, my parents were at there wits end they didn't know what to do with me. They took me for blood tests, wanting to know why I was sick everyday, complaining of a headache everyday. So I know how hard it is as well. But i've come along way in 8 yrs and I am still with my psychiatrist and she continues to help me out.

<font color=red>~Sundance~</font color=red>

<font color=blue>"Never react emotionally to criticism. Analyze yourself to determine whether it is justified. If it is, correct yourself. Otherwise, go on about your business."</font color=blue>

<font color=black>Norman Vincent Peale</font color=black>
__________________
Exposure Therapy- Treatment For Anxiety Disorders



  #6  
Old Jun 26, 2004, 12:45 PM
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SunshineGold03 SunshineGold03 is offline
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Member Since: Jan 2004
Location: RI, USA
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Exposure Therapy- Treatment For Anxiety Disorders

Jenn
  #7  
Old Jul 04, 2004, 11:18 AM
Butterfly_Faerie's Avatar
Butterfly_Faerie Butterfly_Faerie is offline
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Member Since: Mar 2004
Location: Ontario, Canada
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Awww hehe, thank-you , and your welcome.

<font color=red>~Sundance~</font color=red>

<font color=blue>"Never react emotionally to criticism. Analyze yourself to determine whether it is justified. If it is, correct yourself. Otherwise, go on about your business."</font color=blue>

<font color=black>Norman Vincent Peale</font color=black>
__________________
Exposure Therapy- Treatment For Anxiety Disorders



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