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Edited by
Richard Williams, University of South Wales,Verity Kemp, Independent Health Emergency Planning Consultant,Keith Porter, University of Birmingham,Tim Healing, Worshipful Society of Apothecaries of London,John Drury, University of Sussex
Disasters are much misunderstood events, with misassumptions being common currency in popular culture, mass media, and even professional walks of life. We term these the myths of disasters for convenience. Rather than absolute errors of perception, they represent statistical generalisations about what is unlikely to happen in calamity. That people panic is perhaps the most common and enduring myth of all. Panic is a transient phenomenon that occurs only in specific circumstances. Looting, a measure of the breakdown of social order, is also uncommon, although it may occur where preconditions for it exist. Like other misconceptions, these myths fit easily into the ‘Hollywood model’ derived from highly stylised disaster movies. This model is countered by the therapeutic community that sociologists have found in post-disaster settings. Better education and more responsible reporting could do much to reduce beliefs in inaccurate portrayals of the phenomenon.
Collective solidarity emphasises the significance of communities. When governments fail to help their people, collective solidarity appears, especially given that top-down, externally determined risk management systems are often inadequate.
Severe anxiety affects a huge number of women in pregnancy and the postnatal period, making a challenging time even more difficult. You may be suffering from uncontrollable worries about pregnancy and birth, distressing intrusive thoughts of accidental or deliberate harm to the baby, or fears connected to traumatic experiences. This practical self-help guide provides an active route out of feeling anxious. Step-by-step, the book teaches you to apply cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT) techniques in the particular context of pregnancy and becoming a new parent in order to overcome maternal anxiety in all its forms. Working through the book you will gain understanding of your anxiety and how factors from the past and present may be playing a role in how you feel. Together with practical exercises and worksheets to move through at your own pace, you will gain the tools you need to help you move forward and enjoy parenthood.
Panic attacks are frightening experiences. During a panic, you experience strong physical sensations that feel very serious and threatening at the time. This can leave you fearful of having further panic attacks. This chapter outlines how to understand and beat panic attacks at this time. Pregnancy is a time of lots of physical change and lots of focus on those changes, which can be difficult if you have become worried about physical sensations. It can be difficult managing panic attacks if you are caring for young children. We guide you through the cognitive understanding of panic attacks, that they are driven by understandable but incorrect interpretations of physical sensations. We will help you to apply this theory to your individual situation, to recognise which sensations are particularly frightening, and outline experiments to target behaviours such as avoidance, focus on sensations and other factors that keep the fear going.
This chapter provides an overview of what anxiety problems are, and why the perinatal period features all the key ingredients that can lead to problemmatic anxiety. Nurturing and caring for a baby is not easy for anyone and involves large emotional and physical demands, managing uncertainty and avoiding harm. All in the context of disturbed sleep and a major life change. The cognitive-behavioural model of anxiety states that it is not just the situation we find ourselves in, but the particular meaning we give to our experiences that drive and make sense of our emotions and other responses. In pregnancy and the postnatal period these meanings may be influenced by a complicated and sometimes traumatic journey to pregnancy and birth, beliefs about the importance of thoughts or physical sensations, and how we respond to the responsibility of being pregnant or in charge of a baby, as well as other personal and historical factors. There are many common factors across anxiety problems. In the rest of the book we explain how to apply this basic understanding to overcome particular forms of maternal anxiety.
Anxiety disorders make sense only in the evolutionary context of the origins and functions of normal anxiety. Anxiety is an adaptation that adjusts diverse aspects of individuals in ways that increase fitness in dangerous situations. Subtypes were partially differentiated by different dangers. Anxiety is not fully differentiated from other aversive emotions, especially low mood. Anxiety disorders result when regulation systems fail. Explaining them requires considering five possible reasons for vulnerability. However, much harmful anxiety arises from normal mechanisms. These insights are valuable in the clinic, and they suggest new research initiatives.
The front-line nurses are at risk of physical and psychological damage during an epidemic. This study aimed to investigate the level of nurses’ fear in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) central hospitals in Iran.
Methods:
The study is cross-sectional. The questionnaire was designed in 2 parts (demographic and the level of fear). The sampling method was quota and random. The questionnaires were completed by the same nurses after 4 weeks.
Results:
A total of 345 questionnaires were distributed (the response rate was 89.27%). A total of 121 nurses (39.3%) were female. Most participants were in the 26-30 y group. paired t-test showed the mean fear of COVID-19 in the first and the fourth weeks was significant (P < 0.001). There was a statistical relationship between demographic variables of gender, age, marriage, number of working shifts, having children, and work experience of nurses with the level of fear.
Conclusions:
Health-care providers have shown resilience and a spirit of professional sacrifice to overcome problems. The nurses experienced a level of disease-related fear in close contact with COVID-19 patients. It is essential to apply strategies to optimize safe working conditions and minimize psychological harm and provide regular and intensive training to all health-care providers to improve preparedness.
In this session, the patient is queried about issues of anger management, and is taught emotion regulation skills. This session presents the anger toolbox: a set of tools to use when angry.
The session introduces a Trauma-Recall Protocol, which consists of a set of “tools” (for example, emotion regulation techniques) to be used when unwanted trauma recall occurs, and that help the patient to tolerate exposure. During the teaching of the protocols, be sure that the patient does the stretching and other motions, and, if the patient does not, encourage the patient to do so. The therapist should maintain a playful demeanor. At times, to ensure that a sense of relaxation is being conveyed, the therapist should purposefully slow and deepen the voice. (This creates a sense of shift in the session.)
In this session, applied stretching is taught, and the patient is led once more through the whole body muscle relaxation (with contract-release and stretch-release relaxation) with visualization. As in almost all lessons, there is a section on mindfulness and stretching. As indicated in the last session, the therapist should be sure that the patient does the stretching and other motions, and, if the patient does not, the therapist should encourage the patient to do so, all the while with a playful mien, a playful demeanor. This models a positive way of interacting and it also creates new positive associations to the topics being discussed. At times, to promote relaxation, the therapist should purposefully slow and deepen the voice. This also creates a sense of shift in the session: a shift in voice and emotional register.
In this session, again somatic symptoms and associated trauma networks and catastrophic cognitions are explored and addressed (on our model of how somatic symptoms are generated, see the Multiplex Model of Trauma-Related Disorder). The session also reviews key information such as emotion protocols (e.g., anxiety and anger protocol) and the applied stretching protocol.
Applied muscle relaxation” is traditionally used to describe the relaxation of muscles by contracting a muscle, holding the contraction, and then releasing tension. This might also be called “contract-release muscle relaxation.” Another method of muscle relaxation, such as that used in yoga, involves stretching a muscle by forced elongation and then holding the forced elongation a certain time, then releasing it. This might also be called “elongation-release relaxation” or “stretch-release relaxation.” CA Multiplex CBT teaches both applied muscle relaxation (i.e., “contract-release” relaxation) and applied muscle stretching (i.e., “elongation-release” relaxation), but emphasizes elongation-release relaxation, that is, yoga-type stretching. Traumatized patients have multiple symptoms induced by muscle tension. Examples of sensations caused by muscle tension include joint soreness, muscle soreness, and headache. Additionally, as discussed in the Introduction, applied muscle stretching allows for the introduction of phrases and images that promote a positive self-image of flexibility and prime to being flexible. These are embodied metaphors.
In this session, diaphragmatic breathing is taught to illustrate that normal breathing relieves anxiety, and hyperventilation is used to show that abnormal breathing can induce symptoms but that those symptoms are not dangerous. The patient is educated about breathing and educated about trauma associations to and catastrophic cognitions about symptoms caused by hyperventilation and chest breathing, such as chest tightness, dizziness, and cold extremities. The patient is made to hyperventilate to educate about breathing-induced symptoms, to create positive reassociations to dizziness and other sensations, to address trauma associations to the symptoms, to reduce fear of the hyperventilation-induced symptoms, and to act as interoceptive exposure that creates new nonthreating associations to the symptoms.
In this session, the patient is queried about worry episodes and resulting distress. Among ethnic minority and refugee patients, worry is common, and often triggers somatic symptoms, for example, dizziness and headache; triggers psychological symptoms (e.g., poor attention and concentration); and triggers panic. We have found worry to be a key psychopathological process in many minority and refugee populations. This session addresses worry in many ways, such as eliciting causes, symptoms, catastrophic cognitions, and trauma associations. Many treatments are used, such as modifying catastrophic cognitions and teaching mindfulness, including introducing a new form of mindfulness (tea/coffee mindfulness exercise). As a form of switching attentional focus, to treat worry, we introduce two forms of behavioral activation: encouraging exercise (for example, wall push-ups), and prescribing pleasurable activities.
Interoceptive exposure is introduced, focusing on dizziness sensations that are induced by head rolling. We use head rolling to educate about dizziness, to modify catastrophic cognitions about dizziness, to create positive reassociations to dizziness, to address trauma associations to dizziness (and other induced symptoms), and to act as interoceptive exposure that creates new nonthreatening associations to dizziness (and other induced symptoms). Interoceptive exposure also acts as behavioral activation and as a way to create an attitude of playfulness, a sort of flexibility. In the session there is also further training in emotion regulation (emotion flexibility) by practicing certain emotions.
In this session, somatic symptoms and associated trauma networks and catastrophic cognitions are explored and addressed (on our model of how somatic symptoms are generated, see the Multiplex Model of Trauma-Related Disorder). The session also reviews key information, such as emotion protocols (e.g., anxiety and anger protocol) and the applied stretching protocol.
In this session, metaphors for teaching about trauma-related symptomatology are presented to educate about PTSD and to help emotional processing: the “inner child watching DVDs” analogy and “two-television sets” analogy. Catastrophic cognitions about anxiety symptoms are addressed: the patient is taught about the physiology of fear. This Western model then is contrasted with the cultural group’s interpretation of anxiety-type somatic symptoms as indicated by dire events.Emotional distancing is taught.
This chapter is a theoretical introduction to the treatment. This includes introduction to the model that guides treatment (the multiplex model), aspects of efficacy, and a review of studies supporting the approach.
In this session, sleep-related phenomena are addressed. Trauma victims often experience sleep-related phenomena including poor sleep, nightmares, sleep paralysis, and nocturnal panic.
In this session, the patient is taught several emotion regulation techniques; diaphragmatic breathing for relaxation, emotion distancing, and the use of adaptive emotional states. Two forms of behavioral activation are taught: encouraging exercise and doing wall push-ups, and prescribing pleasurable activities. (Of note, throughout the treatment we have the patient do behavioral activation. We consider such actions as stretching and interoceptive exposure to be a form of behavioral activation in that they allow the patient to enter a new zone of experience and involve activity.)