Social Anxiety Disorder

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Social Anxiety Disorder
Social Anxiety Disorder is one of the most common psychiatric disorders. Twelve percent of Americans today have experienced Social Anxiety during their life. Social Anxiety makes a person feel scared of being laughed at, being judged, and also being embarrassed in front of a lot of people. It is so effective, a person with this disorder might have to stop doing their everyday things just not to feel judged, laughed at, or being embarrassed. Social Anxiety is most likely to happen in the early ages of life. Fifty percent of people who develop this disorder are at the age of 11 and 80% have developed this disorder at the age of 20. Symptoms of the disorder are blushing, sweating, trembling. palpitations, nausea, panic attacks, and stammering. Most people who have this may use drugs or alcohol to relieve themselves and also to reduce their fears.

History of Social Anxiety Disorder
Social Anxiety was a term that was created in the 1900’s. Psychologists used the term “social neurosis” to describe extremely shy patients in the 1930’s (2). Isaac Marks created the idea of the name Social Phobia in the 1960’s. After he created the word, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) accepted the word and then officially included the word in the third edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders for the first time (2). More attention and research came about the disorder by a psychiatrist Michael Leibowitz and a clinical psychologist Richard Heimberg. (2). “The DSM-IV gave Social Phobia the alternative name social anxiety disorder ”(2). Research continued everyday on the anxiety. In the 1990s. Paroxetine became one of the first prescriptions drug in the U.S approved to treat social an...

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... to teach a patient with Social Anxiety to behave, react, and think differently in situations that help them feel less anxious or fearful. CBT also helps people learn how to develop social skills.

Works Cited

Hollander, Eric, and Nick Bakalar. Coping with Social Anxiety: The definitive guide to effective treatment options. New York: H. Holt, 2005.

"Social Anxiety Disorder." Wikipedia. Wikimedia Foundation. 19 Feb. 2014 .

"Social Phobia (Social Anxiety Disorder)." NIMH RSS. 12 Feb. 2014 .

"Treating Anxiety Disorders | NIH MedlinePlus the Magazine." U.S National Library of Medicine. U.S. National Library of Medicine. 13 Feb. 2014 .

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