
January/February 2008
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Book
Reviews
There are so many useful books in the field, it will
take me a while to review them all for you. But
let me start with two great ones: Tamar Chansky's Freeing
Your Child from Anxiety and Rygh and Sanderson's Treating
Generalized Anxiety Disorder. |

Freeing Your Child from Anxiety, Tamar Chansky, Ph.D.,
(paperback, 308 pages) Broadway Books, 2004.
The subtitle of this book is “powerful, practical
strategies to overcome your child’s fears, phobias
and worries,” and that is an accurate assessment
of this excellent resource. Her approach is summarized
on page 9, “Remember the goal: it’s not to
talk your children out of their fears, it’s to teach
them how to talk themselves through their fears. Don’t
remove the hurdle, but teach them how to jump over it.” I’ll
talk more about what she has to offer in the article below. |
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Treating Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Evidence-Based
Strategies, Tools, and Techniques, Jayne Rygh
and William Sanderson, (paperback, 210 pages) Guilford,
2004.
We are in need of good treatment guides for GAD. Fortunately,
we have this one now. The book is published in an
8 ½ X 11 format, with 26 reproducible handouts for
clients. This is designed as a therapist’s manual,
in the best sense of the word. Clear, highly organized
and step-wise. Structures are provided for each of
the three targeted areas: cognitive, physiological and
behavioral. Cognitive gets the most attention, with about
12 different protocols. For those new to the treatment
of GAD, client responses on two forms—the Worry Episode
Log and the Rational Response Form—will give you
ample material to work with over several sessions. I certainly
hope that others, like Tom Borkovic, will grace us with
a manual for their innovative approaches to GAD. In
the meantime, nothing competes with this one. |
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Training
Event:
Winning
the Anxiety Game
Brief Strategic Treatment for the Anxiety Disorders
I'll be offering a 5-day training on Cape Cod this summer.
I'll teach from 9 to noon each morning. We'll cover:
- Principles and Goals for Brief Strategic Treatment
- The Anxiety Disorder Game and Second-Order Change
- Provocative Treatment of Panic Disorder and Social Anxiety
- Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder
- Worry and Generalized Anxiety Disorder
 

Self-Help Update:
Talking to Kids about Anxiety
I want to share some of the helpful viewpoints and principles Dr.
Tamar Chansky conveys in her book Freeing Your Child from Anxiety.
It is clear that her goal is to empower kids, not “fix” them or
“treat” them.
Her “master plan for anxiety” (page 85), involves these steps:
-
Empathize
with what your child is feeling
-
Relabel
the problem as the worry brain
-
Rewire
and resist: act with your smarts, not your fears
- Get the
body on board – turn off the alarms
-
Refocus
on what you want to do
- Reinforce
your child’s efforts at fighting
Education is empowerment. The more anxious children can comprehend
what is happening to them, the better they can develop coping
skills. On page 62 she explains, “An easy way to remember the order
of the brain train is to work your way down the body – head
(thoughts) to stomach (feelings) to toes (do your feet run away or
stay?).” Then on page 63 she begins to drive a wedge between worries
and actions by teaching the client to hesitate instead of jumping to
conclusions. “Remember that you have two hands. How about the worry
goes in one hand, and the calm thoughts go in the other? That
should be easy to remember – when you go into a situation, just
remember to take both hands!”
On page 68 she is continuing to coach this perspective with the
concept of second reaction and by externalizing and personifying
worry. “Feeling scared doesn’t mean you are in danger. Go for your
second reaction – think about the probability and realize that what
you’re warned about is no more probable now than it was before you
thought it. Use good, smart thinking to boss back the worry brain,
and teach it a lesson about how things work.” She defines that
“boss back” voice as the one inside you that tells people you can’t
be bossed around, the same voice you use when a younger sibling is
trying to mess with you. By page 80 she is introducing systematic
desensitization. “When emotions compete, you win too. It’s a
process called reciprocal inhibition. Feeling mad, relaxed
or goofy inhibits your ability to feel scared. Basically, you can’t
be in two places at once emotionally.”
As she addresses the individual phobias and fears, she gives great
tips for exposure exercises.
-
Fear of
lightning: use a strobe light or flashlights turned on and off
-
Blood,
injection, injury fears: create blood with ketchup or water with
food coloring
-
Fear of
the dark: read or have a snack by flashlight
- Separation anxiety: “Have your child draw an independence
thermometer. Color in the thermometer in units of minutes or
hours that your child is able to be apart from you, and plan a
special celebration when your child reaches the top.” (page
195)
She certainly has adopted the strategic
approach when she teaches the child to manipulate the symptoms
instead for trying to extinguish them:
-
OCD bad thoughts: “turn
intrusive images of hurting people into cartoons, with little
mice squeaking the scary thoughts, thus demoting them.” (page
214)
- throat-clearing tic: learn to take a slow deep breath, or a
swallow, or chew gum.
- lip-licking tic: picture his
mouth as a baseball diamond…
“instead of rounding all the bases, teach his tongue to go just
to the corner of his mouth and back to ‘first base…’” (page 231)
Professional Update:
Can Medication Enhance Memory?
The D-cycloserine studies
In behavior therapy, one
central approach is to encourage extinction of a conditioned fear by
repeatedly pairing the feared stimulus with either relaxation or
some other response that is counter to the fear. The tuberculosis
antibiotic D-cycloserine (DCS) is currently under study as an
enhancer to that learning process. DCS boosts glutamate signaling by
acting on the glycine site of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)
receptor. It is possible that this may reorder connections between
perception and the fear response. A few early studies indicate
that, at least at the beginning of behavioral treatment, it might
serve a helpful function.
In one study 32 patients
with OCD were randomized either to receive 125 mg of DCS or placebo
2 hours before each of 10 sessions of behavioral therapy. The
sessions involved hierarchical exposure to feared stimuli. Once
distress was reduced by 50%, the next stimulus was introduced. By
the fourth session, DCS subjects reported significantly greater
reduction in distress than the placebo group. By the end of
treatment, those differences disappeared. At the end of treatment
and 3 months later, both groups had equivalent reductions in OCD
symptoms. This implies that DCS may augment treatment in the early
phase by showing patients a greater payoff to their efforts. A
second important finding was that only 6% of DCS recipients dropped
out, versus 35% of the placebo recipients. Here is another sign that
DCS may help exposure therapy seem more palatable for patients who
are leery of starting or continuing behavior therapy. If DCS
motivates patients to remain in therapy until it becomes effective,
then perhaps it can aid in turning the tide in the consistently
moderate
dropout rate for behavior therapy in most of the anxiety disorders.
Two studies show the benefits of DCS in very short treatment
interventions (2-5 sessions). The first looked at whether the
short-term treatment with a smaller dose (50 mg) of DCS would
enhance the effectiveness of exposure therapy for social anxiety
disorder (SAD). Twenty-seven participants received 5 exposure
therapy sessions delivered in either an individual or group therapy
format. One hour prior to each session, participants received single
doses of DCS or placebo. Those receiving DCS in addition to exposure
therapy reported significantly less social anxiety compared with
those taking placebo, and controlled effect sizes were in the medium
to large range.
In the second study, 28 patients with acrophobia (fear of heights)
were treated with two sessions of virtual reality exposure to
heights within a virtual glass elevator. Single doses of placebo or
DCS were taken prior to each session. Patients receiving DCS had
significantly more improvement than patients receiving placebo
within the virtual environment (1 week after treatment and 3 months
later) as well as on general measures of the real-world acrophobia
symptoms (avoidance of, anxiety about, and attitude toward heights,
and self-exposures to real-world heights). The improvement was
evident early in the treatment and was maintained at 3 months.
Resources
Ressler KJ, Rothbaum BO, Tannenbaum L, et al. Cognitive
enhancers as adjuncts to psychotherapy use of D-cycloserine in
phobic individuals to facilitate extinction of fear. Arch Gen
Psychiatry 2004; 61:1136-1144.
Hofmann SG; Meuret AE; Smits JA; Simon NM; Pollack MH; Eisenmenger K; Shiekh M; Otto MW. Augmentation of exposure therapy with D-cycloserine for
social anxiety disorder. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2006;
63(3):298-304.
Pull, CB. Combined pharmacotherapy and cognitive-behavioural therapy for
anxiety disorders. Curr
Opin Psychiatry 2007;
20(1):30-35,
Kushner MG et al. D-cycloserine
augmented exposure therapy for obsessive-compulsive disorder.
Biol Psychiatry 2007 Oct 15; 62:835.
Krystal JH. Neuroplasticity as a target
for the pharmacotherapy of psychiatric disorders: New
opportunities for synergy with psychotherapy. Biol
Psychiatry 2007, Oct 15; 62:8
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