Treatments for Anxiety Stacy Shaw Welch, PhD Anxiety and Stress Reduction Center (ASRC) of Seattle June 2, 2010 FCAP Seminar Series / Partners for our.
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Transcript Treatments for Anxiety Stacy Shaw Welch, PhD Anxiety and Stress Reduction Center (ASRC) of Seattle June 2, 2010 FCAP Seminar Series / Partners for our.
Treatments for Anxiety
Stacy Shaw Welch, PhD
Anxiety and Stress Reduction Center
(ASRC) of Seattle
June 2, 2010
FCAP Seminar Series / Partners for our Children
Overview
Part 1 – Understanding anxiety
Part 2 – Treating anxiety: First line
treatment approaches for anxiety
Part 3 – Concepts of Modular
Treatment (moving from Evidence
Based Treatment to Evidence Based
Practice)
Part 4 - Introduction to Modules for
Anxiety Treatment
Fear, Anxiety, and
Anxiety Disorders
What is anxiety?
Fear: focused response to a known or
definite threat
Fight or flight response
Necessary for survival
Anxiety: fear response in the absence
of clear danger (anticipation or
possibility)
Universal experience / wide range of
normal
Can be useful/ functional
What is an anxiety disorder?
Persistent anxiety over time around
situations that are not objectively
dangerous / anxiety not appropriate to
developmental level
Causes
Marked distress
Impairment in functioning
Note: this can be obvious or more
subtle in children (e.g., family system
is organized around child’s anxiety)
Anxiety vs. Anxiety Disorder
More a matter of degrees
Example of separation anxiety:
Normal / functional at specific developmental
stages
Some children show increased S.A. as a result of
traumatic conditioning
Some children show increased S.A. with no
traumatic conditioning
Some children would have such severe or
longlasting symptoms that it would meet criteria for
a disorder
Anxiety disorders
Separation anxiety disorder
Specific phobia
Social phobia
Panic disorder/agoraphobia
Generalized anxiety disorder (GAD)
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD)/
Acute stress disorder (ASD)
Obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)
Development of Anxiety
Biology + learning
Genetics, temperament clearly influence
who becomes anxious
Environment powerful source of learning
and continued “wiring” of the brain to
either anticipate
• lack of control and danger or
• safety and resources to cope
Transaction between the two continues
over the lifespan –this is the tragedy
and great hope
Development of Anxiety
Another important transaction: the
interaction of anxious behaviors and
the environment
Anxiety “pulls” for certain behaviors
from the environment
These environmental responses can
further reinforce anxiety and prevent
corrective learning experiences
Treating Anxiety: Brief
Review of Research
Treatment
Two main treatment approaches for
children, teens and adults
CBT – by far most well researched
and effective treatment for anxiety.
Should be first-line intervention,
combined with meds for moderate or
severe disorder.
Medication – SSRIs first, then
augmentation strategies
What is CBT?
-Skills based, problem-solving, very practical
approach to emotionally driven
problems/behaviors
-Patients learn to take “bite-sized” small steps
towards health
-Biopsychosocial model as opposed to purely
biomedical model
Should include at least 4 elements:
education/monitoring, tools to calm physiology,
cognitive restructuring, exposure
What kinds of problems can it be
used for?
Think behavior change, esp. emotionally driven behaviors
Depression *
Anxiety disorders**
Unexplained medical illness / somatization
Chronic pain management
Eating disorders (bulimia and binge eating)
Insomnia (primary and secondary)
Addictions
Non-adherence to medical recommendations
Lifestyle / Behaviors linked to chronic disease care (physical activity,
diet, social support, medications, etc.)
Child internalizing and depressive disorders**
Marital distress
Anger
Specific Approaches to
Anxiety Treatment
Adults: a manual (or two, or three) for each anxiety disorder
Children: Not much until 1980’s (DSM-III)
Early approaches: adult techniques and theories with childlanguage
Major studies / treatments to know:
CBT for anxiety: “Coping Cat”, “Coping Koalla (Kendall,
Barrett)
Talking Back to OCD: ERP (March), POTS
CAMS (meds plus CBT)
TFCBT – Trauma – focused CBT
Modular treatments emphasizing exposure (Chorpita)
Conceptual framework for
Modular Treatment of
Anxiety
Modular treatment
Addressing what happens when you
try to apply evidence based treatment
in community settings with
Complex clients
Complex situations
Logistical challenges (e.g., time)
Evidence-based treatments
vs. practice
Evidence-based treatments
“interventions or techniques that have
produced therapeutic change in controlled
trials” (Kazdin, 2008)
Evidence-based practice
“clinical practice that is informed by evidence
about interventions, clinical expertise, and
patient needs, values, and preferences and
their integration in decision making about
individual care” (Kazdin, 2008)
Protocol-based treatment
Strong trend over the last 25 years toward
the development of standardized, protocolbased treatments (i.e., treatment manuals)
Protocol characteristics:
Disorder specific
Step-by-step list of interventions
Same set of procedures across clients
Dissemination and training is generally
needed for each protocol
Pros and cons
Pros
Significant advances in the scientific study of
psychotherapy (treatments are replicable)
Improved treatment outcomes
Greater consistency and quality of care
Cons
Problems with dissemination
Overlap and redundancy across protocols
Multiple protocols for the same disorder
Don’t address co-morbidity
Decreased flexibility in treatment
Encourage disorder-specific thinking
Modular-based treatment
Emerging trend in recent years toward more
modular, flexible approaches to treatment
Modular approaches provide a set of
overarching principles and a set of evidencebased interventions (“modules”)
Not all modules are necessarily used with each
client and the order of modules may vary from
client to client
Decisions about which modules to use and in
what order are based on the unique symptom
patterns of each client
Modular treatment and anxiety
Anxiety disorders lend themselves well to a
modular treatment approach because…
They share many of the same features and
symptoms
A CBT conceptualization of anxiety can be
applied across the disorders
There is considerable overlap in the interventions
that comprise the treatment protocols for the
various disorders
Modular approaches have been developed for
treating anxiety in children/adolescents
(Chorpita, 2006) and somewhat with adults
(Barlow et al., 2004; Sullivan et al., 2007)
Basic CBT model of anxiety
Physical sensations
(physiological arousal)
Anxiety
Thoughts
(perception of threat)
Behaviors
(avoidance, safety behaviors)
Safety behaviors
Anxious people often engage in a range of
behaviors to make themselves feel safer when
they cannot avoid anxious situations
These behaviors are attempts to neutralize
feelings of anxiety
Although these behaviors can facilitate
functioning, they also prevent recovery
Examples
Reassurance seeking
Over-preparation
Behavioral rituals
Safety cues/objects
Integrated CBT Model of
Anxiety Disorders
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Pre-existing
Beliefs
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Environmental
Factors
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
Components of the model
Fear stimulus/trigger
Misinterpretation of threat
Primary cognitive distortions in anxiety
(1) Overestimating the likelihood of negative outcomes
(2) Catastrophizing
Avoidant coping
Anxiety is almost always cued
Primary avoidance – avoiding triggers altogether
Secondary avoidance – engaging in safety behaviors
when complete avoidance is not possible
Absence of corrective learning
New learning does not occur and the fear is maintained
(and often strengthened)
Separation anxiety disorder
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
- Separating from parent at school.
- Going to a friend’s house for a sleep-over.
- My mom/dad might die.
- Something bad might happen to my mom/dad.
- Panic symptoms, crying
- Primary avoidance: Refuse to leave house/car;
call home to be picked up
- Secondary avoidance: Separates but only if can
call parent repeatedly to seek reassurance that
he/she is okay; has to carry cell phone at all times
Specific phobia (flying)
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
- Needing to fly for a business trip.
- Needing to fly for a family vacation.
Misinterpretation
of Threat
- Something will go wrong with the plane.
- The plan will crash and I will die.
Anxiety
- Increased heart rate, shallow breathing
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
- Primary avoidance: Avoid going on the trip; get
someone else to attend the business meeting;
family drives to vacation spot instead of flying
- Secondary avoidance: Sit next to “safe” person;
distract self for entire flight; seek reassurance
from others about airline safety; drink alcohol or
take Xanax before/during the flight (adults)
Social phobia
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
- Having to give a presentation in front of the class.
- Needing to ask a question in a store.
- I will sound stupid. My mind will go blank.
- I will be an inconvenience. He will be annoyed.
- Increased heart rate, sweating, lightheaded
- Primary avoidance: Skip class; avoid asking the
question
- Secondary avoidance: Look down at notes during
the entire presentation; talk quickly; over-prepare
for presentation; overly apologetic when asking
question
Panic disorder
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
- Exercising and heart rate starts to increase.
- I am going to have a heart attack.
- I am going to pass out.
- Panic symptoms (increased heart rate, shallow
breathing, sweating, dizziness)
- Primary avoidance: Stop exercising; leave the gym
- Secondary avoidance: Repeatedly check heart
rate; call doctor office; go to urgent care center;
seek reassurance from friend; carry water and cell
phone at all times at gym
GAD
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
- Trying to call spouse and he/she is not answering.
- Something must have happened.
- He/she was in an accident.
- Restlessness, muscle tension, increased heart
rate
- Primary avoidance: N/A
- Secondary avoidance: Repeatedly calling spouse
at multiple numbers (work, cell phone) until
reaching him/her; keep busy and try to distract self
until spouse is home
PTSD (sexual assault)
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
- Walking home from bus stop after work at dusk.
- I am not safe.
- Someone could assault/rape me on the way home.
- Increased heart rate, shallow breathing,
upset stomach
- Primary avoidance: Avoid taking the bus; drive to
and from work; call someone for a ride
- Secondary avoidance: Have someone walk with
him/her between bus stop and home; talk on cell
phone during entire walk home; walk quickly; carry
pepper spray in hand during walk
OCD (checking)
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
- Turning off the stove after cooking breakfast.
- What if I left the stove on?
- It could burn down the house.
- Increased heart rate
- Primary avoidance: Avoid eating breakfast foods
that require using the stove
- Secondary avoidance: Repeatedly check the stove
before leaving the house; drive back home midday from work to check the stove; call neighbor to
check on the house; mentally review memory of
turning off the stove throughout the day
Shared processes to target
There are a set of anxiety processes that are
important to target regardless of which anxiety
disorder is being treated
Maladaptive thoughts that contribute to
perceptions of threat in safe situations
Physiological reactivity in response to fear
triggers
Avoidance behaviors that prevent the habituation
of fear
Safety behaviors that prevent new learning
Problematic reinforcement of anxiety by the
environment
Good news…
We have very effective CBT interventions for the
processes common to the anxiety disorders!
Process/problem
Misperception of threat
Physiological reactivity
Cognitive restructuring
Avoidance behaviors
Intervention
Safety behaviors
Reinforcement of anxiety
by environment
Relaxation skills
Exposure**
Response prevention
Contingency management
Modular treatment for anxiety
A modular CBT approach to treating
anxiety involves…
Assessing which anxiety processes are
most prominent for each client
Selecting the evidence-based
interventions (“modules”) that are effective
for treating these processes
Sequencing these modules to address the
unique characteristics of each client and
his/her environment
CBT “modules” for anxiety
Psychoeducation
Self-monitoring
Relaxation skills
Cognitive restructuring
Response prevention
Flexible modules
Exposure*
Parenting techniques
Changing environmental
contingencies/responses
Relapse prevention
Others: social skills, emotion regulation, behavioral
activation, motivational interviewing….
Flowchart for a standard manualized CBT protocol
Fear
Ladder
Learning about
Anxiety
Relaxation
Cognitive
Restructuring
Exposure
Rewards / Practice
Maintenance
Finish
Modular CBT protocol – (Just get to Exposure)
Fear
Ladder
Learning
about
Anxiety
child ready
to practice?
yes
Interference
no
in vivo
possible?
yes
In Vivo
Exposure
no
Imaginal
Exposure
yes
more items
to practice?
no
Maintenancee
Finish
Modular flowchart for treatment planning
Fear
Ladder
moderate
disruptive
behavior?
parents
rewarding
avoidance?
negative
beliefs or
depression?
mild disruptive
Behavior?
Learning
about
Anxiety
low
motivation?
Skills:
Meeting
People
bright, verbal, yes
or older?
Ignoring
Cognitive
Restructuring:
no
yes
in vivo
possible?
yes
In
Vivo
Exposure
Probability
Cognitive
no
troubleshoot
Social
Active
no
social skills
deficits?
Rewards
Time-Out
child ready
to practice?
other
yes
Social
Skills:
Nonverbal
Cognitive
Restructuring: Restructuring:
STOP
Catastrophic
Imaginal
Exposure
more items
to practice?
no
Maintenance
Finish
Modular flowchart for treatment planning
Fear
Ladder
moderate
disruptive
behavior?
parents
rewarding
avoidance?
negative
beliefs or
depression?
mild disruptive
Behavior?
Learning
about
Anxiety
slow
motivation?
Active
Ignoring
no
no
yes
In Vivo
Exposure
no
Imaginal
Exposure
troubleshoot
Social Skills:
Meeting
People
bright, verbal, yes
or older?
yes
in vivo
possible?
social skills
deficits?
Rewards
Time-Out
child ready
to practice?
other
Cognitive
Restructuring:
Probability
Social Skills:
Nonverbal
Cognitive
Cognitive
Restructuring: Restructuring:
yes
STOP
Catastrophic
more items
to practice?
no
Maintenance
Finish
CBT “modules” for anxiety
Psychoeducation
Self-monitoring
Relaxation skills
Cognitive restructuring
Response prevention
Flexible modules
Exposure*
Parenting techniques
Changing environmental
contingencies/responses
Relapse prevention
Others: social skills, emotion regulation, behavioral
activation, motivational interviewing….
Psychoeducation
Key to helping clients understand their symptoms and
the treatment model
Psychoeducation should include both:
Helpful to fill out the model with the client using
examples from his/her life
Disorder specific information
Review of the integrated CBT model of anxiety
Kids- maps, posters, etc.
Could be used for anxiety disorder or “normal” anxiety
(will be validating if not anxiety reducing)
Could be used for parents dealing with anxiety, even
without anxiety disorder
Integrated Model of Anxiety Client Handout
Fear Stimulus
(trigger or cue)
Pre-existing
Beliefs
Misinterpretation
of Threat
Environmental
Factors
Anxiety
Avoidant Coping
(primary and secondary)
Absence of Corrective
Experience and Learning
Self-monitoring
Critical part of problem/ symptom assessment
Helps client recognize the different components of
their anxious reactions (“anxiety is not a lump”)
Helps clients identify patterns in responses
Elements of self-monitoring for anxiety include:
Triggers/cues for anxiety
Intensity ratings for anxiety (SUDS)
Physical sensations
Anxious thoughts
Anxious behaviors (avoidance, safety behaviors)
Young kids would do with caretaker
Self-monitoring example - panic
Situation/trigger
Standing in line at a store
Intensity of anxiety (0-10) 7
Physical sensations/
other symptoms
Anxious thoughts
(words or images)
Anxious behaviors
(e.g., avoidance, safety
behaviors, rituals)
Increased heart rate, shallow
breathing, sweating
“I am going to have a panic
attack,” “I won’t be able to get
out of here in time”
Put my merchandise down and
left the store; went to sit on a
bench to calm down; took a
Xanax
Self-monitoring example - OCD
Situation/trigger
Hitting a bump in the road
while driving
Intensity of anxiety (0-10) 9
Physical sensations/
other symptoms
Anxious thoughts
(words or images)
Anxious behaviors
(e.g., avoidance, safety
behaviors, rituals)
Increased heart rate
“What if I hit someone with my
car?”
Drove around the block 4 times
to check for injured
pedestrians; mental retracing
Relaxation
Relaxation skills target physiological reactivity
associated with anxiety and worry
Two main skills are
Diaphragmatic breathing – targets acute
panic/anxiety reactions
Progressive muscle relaxation – targets chronic
muscle tension associated with ongoing
anxiety/worry
Important to be realistic about how effective these skills
are in reducing anxiety
Could be taught for anxiety disorder or “normal” anxiety
Creative ways to teach children (bubbles, snake, tire)
Relaxation
Disorder specific recommendations
Breathing re-training is a standard part of
treatment for panic disorder
PMR is a standard part of treatment for GAD
Neither tends to work that well for OCD
General recommendations
Consider using with children and adolescents
regardless of disorder
Consider using with adults regardless of disorder
when physiological symptoms are prominent
and/or interfere with treatment
Coach clients not to use relaxation skills during
exposure exercises
Exposure
Exposure is staying present
with the feared stimulus long
enough for new learning to
occur
(assuming that fear is not really
dangerous)
Habituation and anxiety
Anxiety
Time
Exposure
Three golden rules of exposure:
1. Fears are faced gradually, moving from least to most
difficult
2. The client must stay in the feared situation long
enough to learn that the bad things s/he fears will not
happen.
• If withdrawal occurs to quickly-fear can increase
3. Practice and repetition are the keys to success
• If withdrawal occurs to quickly-fear can increase
Exposure
Process of exposure is similar across the
anxiety disorders, what varies is the fear trigger
Separation anxiety – separation from caregiver
Specific phobia – feared object/ situation
Social phobia – social/performance situations
Panic/agoraphobia – physical sensations of
panic/avoided activities and situations
GAD – worry scenarios/images and worry
triggers
PTSD – trauma memories and triggers
OCD – triggers for obsessions and obsessive
thoughts themselves
Exposure: Build a Hierarchy
First, externalize anxiety
Teach children how to identify and rate anxiety
Fear thermometer / worry scale
Anxiety list, “bravery ladder”, map
Case example: “Jayden”, 9 year old boy with GAD, mild
OCD
• Very significant worries in a wide range of areas – academic,
medical, social, getting hurt, making any mistake
• Adopted at age 4 out of foster care system, very early
abuse/neglect
• Significant risk and protective factors
Example: Jayden, GAD
Situation
Worry Scale
High
Getting a shot
Teacher yelling at me
Making mistakes on tests
Falling and getting hurt at
school
Forgetting my homework
Seeing blood
Thinking about robbers
Getting a bad grade
Going to a new place
10
9
8
8
8
8
9
8
10
9
Medium
Being late for school
Forgetting a library book
Making a mistake on
homework
Meeting new people
Laundry machine
7
7
8
7
5
5
Low
Chatting at school
Playdates
4
3
Exposure hierarchy example
– separation anxiety
SUDs
10
9
8
7
5
3
1
Trigger
Going to an overnight camp
Spending the night at a friend’s house
Staying with grandma – both parents out of
town overnight
One parent out of town overnight
2 hour play-date (no parents present)
1 hour play date (no parents present)
Playing alone in room (parents outside in yard)
Exposure hierarchy example –
PTSD (car accident)
SUDs
10
8
7
5
4
3
2
1
Trigger
Driving on freeway where accident happened
Talking about the memory of the accident
Watching a car accident in a movie/TV show
Driving on a busy road at rush hour
Driving on a busy road not at rush hour
Driving in a busy parking lot
Driving around the block
Sitting in driver’s seat of car in driveway
Exposure hierarchy example –
GAD
SUDs
10
9
8
6
5
5
4
3
Trigger
Imagining spouse dying in car accident
Reading article about cancer
Imagining being fired from job
Imagining son failing out of college
Watching evening news
Imagining being poor in retirement
Reading article about bankruptcy
Making a decision and not reversing it
Exposure hierarchy example –
panic (interoceptive exposure)
SUDs Trigger
10
Running in place for 5 minutes (heart rate)
9
Spinning in chair for 1 minute (dizziness)
7
6
5
4
3
Straw breathing for 1 minute (not enough air)
Over-breathing for 1 minute (hyperventilating)
Walking up 1 flight of stairs (heart rate)
Sitting in heated car for 3 minutes (heat)
Standing up quickly (dizziness)
Tips when doing Exposure
If in doubt, start low
Conduct first exposure in session, if possible
Research on therapist – assisted exposure in OCD
Schedule adequate time
Prep and orient, but don’t drag out
Be aware of your style
Confident
Lots of praise esp. following exposure
Coach
Balance distraction/coping with focus on anxiety
sensations
Debrief afterwards to promote learning
Case Example
Case example – Jayden
Taught breathing and relaxation to entire family
Started exposure with a low anxiety / high probability of
success item (talking to a new person at our office), then
extended to saying hello to baristas at coffee shops , then
moved to saying hello to more people at school
Gradually reduced reassurance seeking (cut by 50% as
directed by child, with reward system). Worked with Mom
to decrease overprotective behaviors and increase
reinforcement for “brave” behaviors
Exposure, cont.
Eventually did “silly” things (say hi in a foreign
language, wear our shirts inside out
downtown)
Moved up hierarchy with parents gradually
coaching more at home during exposures
(e.g., laundry).
Laundry: play reward game near laundry, then
sitting on machine, then put clothes in laundry,
then imagine being sucked in laundry with
therapist
What about traumatized kids
/ “normal” anxiety?
Exposure to actual danger makes fear increase
Exposure when situation is not dangerous will
create decreased fear over time
Consider adding safety cues to help lower anxiety
level
•
•
•
•
Talk it through, focus their attention externally, validate fear
Add safety cues (reassurance, praise)
If needed use distraction
If anxiety can’t be tolerated – avoid and try to come back
later
Examples:
• Dentist / therapy dog
• Little Bear – “the clam”
Cognitive restructuring
Clients learn to:
Identity anxious thoughts
Evaluate / challenge unhelpful or maladaptive thoughts
Generate more balanced, accurate thoughts
Coping thoughts must be believable and not just “positive
thinking”
Rehearsal
Before anxious situations
During anxious situations
With practice, balanced thoughts come more
automatically
Cognitive distortions in anxiety
General
Overestimating the likelihood of negative
outcomes (“jumping to conclusions”)
Catastrophizing (“worst case”)
Cognitive restructuring strategies
Overestimating
likelihood of
negative outcomes: Identify all
other possible outcomes to help
determine the “real odds” of the
feared outcome
Catastrophizing:
Generate a list of
ways to cope with the worst case
scenario
Cognitive restructuring
Tread carefully and use validation
Think developmentally
Focus on helpfulness vs. accuracy
If thoughts are resistant to change, back
off and try again in another way or at
another time
Cognitive restructuring
example – separation anxiety
Anxious thought: If my mom goes to work (at a
college campus) she will get shot and killed.
Cognitive restructuring:
Evidence for: There have been several shootings
at colleges recently
Evidence against: There has never been a
shooting at her campus; she has been to work
hundreds of time and has always come home
safely; she’s never been injured at work at all
Coping thoughts: My mom will likely be okay at
work. Her campus seems to be pretty safe.
Cognitive restructuring
example – social anxiety
Anxious thought: If I go to happy hour with my coworkers I won’t be able to come up with anything to
say and I will look weird.
Cognitive restructuring:
Other possible outcomes: I am able to say
something; I listen to others and just ask questions;
I sit quietly and nobody notices; other people are
quiet too. Real odds: Low.
Coping with worst case: I could excuse myself to
the bathroom and try to think of some things to talk
about; I could think of ideas now before I go
Coping thoughts: I will probably feel anxious but I
can come up with at least 1 thing to say. I am not
responsible for 100% of the conversation.
Cognitive restructuring
example – panic
Anxious thought: I feel lightheaded. I am going to
pass out and make a scene.
Cognitive restructuring:
Other possible outcomes: I might not faint – I never
have before; I feel lightheaded because I am
anxious; the feeling will probably pass after a while.
Real odds: Low.
Coping with worst case: If I fainted other people
around would probably help me; I would feel
embarrassed but that would pass too – I could tell
people that I have a medical condition
Coping thoughts: I been lightheaded many times
and have never fainted. I am not likely to faint but if
I do other people will help me and I won’t feel
embarrassed forever. You don’t die from fainting!
A caveat about OCD
Cognitive restructuring can be
problematic when treating OCD
Core feature of OCD is a difficulty
tolerating doubt and uncertainty
Cognitive restructuring can play right into
this difficulty and often does not “stick”
due to lingering doubts
Can use the strategies to focus on beliefs
about thoughts vs. the content of the
thoughts themselves
Cognitive restructuring
example - OCD
Anxious thought: If I have a bad thought
something bad will happen to someone I love
(example of thought action fusion)
Cognitive restructuring:
Socratic questioning about whether thoughts can
impact events in the world
Behavioral experiments to test this out – think
about something falling from the sky and see if it
does; think about a bug dying and see if it dies;
work up to more difficult experiments about
others being harmed by client’s thoughts
Response prevention
Drawn from OCD treatment, but can be used
broadly across anxiety disorders
Response prevention can be thought of as the
process of blocking any behaviors that are an
attempt to neutralize anxiety (i.e., safety
behaviors)
Exposure less effective without RP, so its good
to start before starting exposure if possible
Often overlooked
Response prevention - steps
Identify safety behaviors
Develop a plan to reduce and eliminate them
(this can be put on your exposure hierarchy)
Goal is to work toward full response prevention
whenever possible (i.e., elimination of all safety
behaviors)
For severe anxiety, esp. health anxiety or OCD,
might have to start with response prevention
Response prevention example
– driving phobia
Safety behavior
Response prevention plan
Listen to talk radio as Lower volume of radio
a distraction
over time until radio is off
altogether
Carry full bottle of
Switch to half empty
water in front seat of
bottle, then mostly empty
car whenever driving
bottle, and then no bottle
Always drive in the
Switch from slow lane to
slow lane on freeway
center lane and then to fast
lane
Response prevention example
– OCD (child)
Ritual/compulsion
Response prevention plan
30 minute checking
sequence before bed
Decrease checking in
steps, eliminating 1 or more
components each week
Change clothes after Decrease number of
coming in from outside articles of clothing being
changed in steps
Confess to others
Decrease total number of
when done something confessions for the day in
“bad”
steps
Response prevention example
– GAD
Safety behavior
Response prevention plan
Call spouse
repeatedly until reach
him/her
Check stock market
updates online 15
times per day
Weigh pros and cons
for lengthy period of
time before making a
minor decision
Call once and then do not
call again if don’t reach
him/her
Check stock market
information once per day
Make minor decisions
within specified time frame
(e.g., a few minutes) and
don’t undo them
Changing environmental
contingencies/responses
Assess carefully for:
Reinforcement of anxious behaviors
Lack of reinforcement for non-anxious behaviors
Key people in client’s life should be involved in
treatment during this module (if not already)
Important to keep client in driver’s seat as much
as possible
Changing the environment –
child client (OCD)
Problem: Anxious child with OCD whose
parents participate in many of the child’s rituals
to help decrease her anxiety
Solution:
Educate the parents about the role that their
behaviors play in perpetuating the child’s anxiety
Provide a clear rationale for why these behaviors
need to change for the child to get better
Teach parents how to reinforce non-anxious
behaviors
Provide a road map for when parents should stop
participating in various rituals
Assist parents as needed in tolerating their own
anxiety about their child’s discomfort
Changing the environment – adult
client (panic/agoraphobia)
Problem: Anxious adult with panic disorder and
agoraphobia who cannot go out in public without
spouse (i.e., the spouse is a primary safety cue)
Solution:
Educate the spouse about the role that his/her
behaviors play in perpetuating the client’s anxiety
Provide a clear rationale for why these behaviors
need to change for the client to get better
Provide a road map for when the spouse should
stop going various places with the client
Teach spouse how to reinforce non-anxious
behaviors
Assist the couple in adjusting to new roles as the
client becomes more independent
Relapse prevention
Important to develop a relapse prevention plan
with all clients prior to ending treatment
Typical elements of this plan include:
List of possible triggers that could lead to relapse
of anxiety or other symptoms
Plan for how to use skills learned in treatment to
cope with these triggers
Plan for how to identify and respond to new
triggers and/or symptoms
List of supports to enlist for help as needed
Guidelines for when to return for booster
sessions or a new course of treatment
Summary
Modular treatment approaches use evidence
based principles and interventions in a flexible
way that allows for individualized treatment
planning
Approaching the treatment of anxiety in a
modular way can highlight the commonalities
among these disorders and how they are
treated
Focus is on doing what is likely to work for the
unique symptom presentation of each client,
within a framework of evidence-based practice
If you know one CBT treatment for anxiety well,
a lot of your knowledge will transfer to treating
other anxiety disorders!