Social Anxiety and Separation Anxiety Disorder
Separation Anxiety
- Clinical Description
- Characterized by unrealistic and persistent worry that something will happen to self or loved ones when apart (e.g., kidnapping, accident) as well as anxiety about leaving loved ones
- 4.1% of children meet criteria, 6.6% for adults
Clinical Description of Social Anxiety
- Extreme/irrational concern about being negatively evaluated by other people
- Sometimes (not always) manifests as shyness
- Leads to significant impairment and/or distress
- Avoidance of feared situations, or endurance with extreme distress
- Subtype
- Performance only: Anxiety only in performance situations (e.g. public speaking)
- Statistics
- 12.1% (life); 6.8% (year)
- Female : Male = 1:1
- Onset = usually adolescence
- Peak age of onset = 13
- More common in people who are young (18 to 29 years), undereducated, single, and of low socioeconomic class,
- 13.6% prevalence in ages 18 to 29
- 6.6% prevalence in ages 60+
Social Anxiety Across Cultures
- Japan—taijin kyofusho
- Fear of offending others or making them uncomfortable
- Concern about aspects of personal appearance (e.g., stuttering, blushing, body odor)
- More common in males
Causes of Social Anxiety
- Generalized psychological vulnerability
- E.g., belief that threatening events are uncontrollable
- Generalized biological vulnerability
- E.g., propensity toward anxiety
Treatment of Social Anxiety
- Medications
- Beta blockers
- Benzodiazepines
- SSRI (Paxil, Zoloft, and Effexor)
- D-cycloserine
- Psychological
- Cognitive-behavioral treatment
- Challenging of anxious thoughts about the consequences of social judgment
- Exposure to anxiety-provoking situations
- Rehearsal
- Role-play
- Highly effective
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