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Social Anxiety
Disorder (SAD) or Social Phobia
Social Anxiety
Disorder (SAD) is a common, distressing and frequently disabling
condition. Social Anxiety Disorder (according to the DSM IV) is
characterized by:
- Fear/Avoidance
of social situations
- Feared situations
avoided or endured with intense anxiety and distress
- Fear recognized
as excessive or unreasonable
- Fear/Avoidance
interferes with work, social life, and family activities
More specifically,
the persistent fear of social or performance situations in which
embarrassment and/or scrutiny by others may occur. Exposure usually
provokes an immediate anxiety response, which sometimes can be severe.
Many individuals also report experiencing panic attack symptoms
as a result of the exposure. In addition, because sufferers become
aware that others could possibly notice them experiencing fear,
by sweating profusely, blushing or shaking, their avoidance behavior
increases. They become hyper-sensitive to not only feeling scared,
but to looking scared also.
Most common
somatic complaints of SAD sufferers are:
- Blushing
- Butterflies
in stomach
- Palpitations
- Stuttering
- Sweating
- Trembling
and shaking
- Gastrointestinal
problems (IBS)
Another common
feature of SAD is anticipatory anxiety (worrying every day for several
weeks) occurring far in advance of the upcoming social or public
event. Consequently, the fear and avoidance behavior significantly
impairs the individual's basic life functioning across the board.
SAD is a highly co-morbid diagnosis, overlapping with depression,
substance abuse and other anxiety disorders such as panic disorder
and agoraphobia. Age and onset of symptoms typically occur between
ages 11-13. Genetic disposition or an inability to metabolize anxiety
properly and developmental influences may be early manifestations
of a lifelong vulnerability to social anxiety.
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