The Therapy Guy
The Therapy Guy
How To Manage Health Anxiety
This episode is centered around our health anxiety and the coronavirus. Knowing how to manage health anxiety during times of upset can lead us to panic and feel frightened,
Lots of people experience health anxiety and it can come from past experiences or from how our mind can focus on one thing during times of stress and anxiety. At times it can also be a result of feeling under pressure, stressed or anxious which can result in physical feelings like aches, pains, headaches, stomach and skin complaints are examples.
I hope you find this episode helpful and if you have any questions or comments then please get in touch.
https://www.horizonplymouth.co.uk
Hello, and welcome to the Therapy Guy.
It's great to have you listening and I appreciate all
your comments and questions that you've been sending in to
us over the past few weeks and rest assured we're
going to be answering all all of those things over
a future episodes so keep on listening.
Today though, what I want to talk about is
a lot that's in the news at the moment
and it's to do with health and health anxiety.
Now I'm sure everybody that's listening would have heard
of this coronavirus, heard of what's going on throughout
the world and obviously now here in the UK,
the coronavirus is obviously spreading and it has a
lot of flu like symptoms and everything else.
But it is reading a little bit of
this hysteria and social media and the media
are contributing to that as well.
I feel what I'd like you to do because I
think this ties into obviously people's health anxieties at times
and I do see a lot of people who suffer
with health anxiety in different formats or whatever.
And this can come in from constantly worrying about
their health overall to checking their signs for illnesses
such as lumps or bumps or pain.
Asking people for reassurance that they're not ill.
Worried that a doctor or medical test might
have missed something so frequenting the local doctors
or GPS or hospitals can be looking or
obsessively looking for health information on things like
the internet and good old Google.
And when things like illnesses or things happen
on TV we can then suddenly start to
worry that we might experience those things.
And obviously then you have another extreme where people can
act as if they're ill and just to avoid physical
activities because it really builds in their minds.
This is all to do with anxiety and because
of anxiety itself gives us some physical responses.
This can often be misinterpreted
as having something medically wrong.
So for example, if someone is quite anxious they may
be very tense, they might hold their body in a
certain position or sit in a certain way.
This can lead to pains in their body,
it can be pains in their back or
we can have headaches and something like that.
And that can be classically places
of tension, stress and anxiety.
But we can sometimes mistake
these four signs of illness.
What can we do about it?
Obviously within the latest outbreak. Within this.
What's happening around the coronavirus at the moment there's
a lot of misinformation that's being put out outside
and a lot of things are happening which I
feel are almost like the classic Chinese whispers where
one piece of information gets leaked or gets mentioned
and by the time somebody else.
Maybe 100 or 1000 people later have heard about it.
It is something so far away from what was originally
said that it can be misinterpreted and obviously cause people
a lot of panic and a lot of anxiety.
What I would suggest you do is just do what
you should normally be doing with regard to the coronavirus.
Just basically wash your hands, take care of, if
you would, any other way, in peak flu season.
Eat properly, sleep properly, ensure your diet
is as healthy as you can be.
Cheque in on people that may be
elderly or have pre existing medical conditions.
Just make sure that they're okay and they have
enough food and they're looking after themselves, too.
Obviously, use certain websites for information.
Don't go googling things.
Don't go looking on forums or anything else,
because if you're already anxious, your mind can
then lead you to the worst case scenarios.
That's what it's designed to do.
I would suggest you look on reputable
government websites, look on the NHS website.
There's plenty of information that has been written
with a rational and common sense approach.
Obviously, we've all heard stories of the people
stocking up, people going and getting all the
toilet rolls and hand sanitizers and everything else,
and I can understand that.
But again, let's have some
rational thoughts amongst it.
It's just spreading and it causes great deal of
worry and distress to certain types of people.
What I'd encourage you to do, again
is just be sensible, be rational.
Look, if you're aware of those signs, then
see if isolate yourself off the same as
what you would do in a natural way.
We might have the cold and the flu.
You avoid certain things.
You use tissues.
They said, you wash your hands, you
look after yourself a bit better.
And if you're worried, then contact one one or go visit
your local GP or speak to them on the phone.
That's what a lot of people are doing now.
But try not to get dragged into
that anxiety response and dealt with the
hysteria that's happening at the moment.
If you have any questions,
seek a proper medical response.
Google isn't a doctor.
It's got lots of fantastic information and
it's a great tool to be used.
But just be careful what you're searching for and
what information and where you're getting it from. Okay?
What you can do sometimes is challenge your thoughts.
And it's something that I often do in my therapy rooms.
So I might ask people, if they're at home
to maybe draw sort of a column or a
table where they have like, a section where they
write down what they're worried about in one column.
And then we encourage them to think a
more balanced way in the second column.
Okay, so you could be worried about losing your job.
Yes.
And in the second column you might actually put down,
well, I've been in this job, there's no opportunities.
The boss is quite understanding all these
sort of things in the second column.
So it rationalises, it out with the health.
If you've got pain, you can say, yes, I'm worried
about this pain in my back or my leg.
Or wherever it is, but then start to
think about, have you over exercised, have you
possibly pulled a muscle doing something that you
haven't usually done or something?
And try to be more rational.
Another good way and a tip that I often use
is trying to think what somebody else would say.
So what would your doctor be saying to you?
What would independent, harsh person be telling you about
this fear or this hope that you're having.
Try to get back to doing normal activities, keeping your
routine structure as best as possible, going to bed at
the same time, getting up, doing everything that you'd normally
do in your day to day routine.
And then obviously, if the anxiety
is getting worse, please try some
breathing exercises, some mindfulness techniques.
There is lots available.
Again, some of them are available on the NHS website.
There's also the Mind website, which is really good
and packed full of information about mental health and
well being and it has some fantastic breathing exercises.
There's also apps like Headspace and Calm.
There's lots of things that you can try.
Of course, if you feel really worried about your
health and it's starting to get worse, or your
symptoms are getting worse, please don't hesitate to bring
a doctor on one, one forward voice.
Yes, I'm not saying you shouldn't do that, I'm just
saying that we need to approach things as rational and
as calm a way as possible and just go about
your things in your life as best as you can
at this moment, keeping an eye on what the government
is saying on the government website.
There's lots of information on the local government website at
the moment, which is www.uk, and at the moment
the number of cases that are in the UK that
have been tested and have been positively confirmed.
It's quite small when you think
of the population as a whole.
Now, I'm not saying that this isn't
going to get higher or anything else
because obviously there is that opportunity.
Just like any flu or virus epidemic, we
have these peaks and troughs that we work
through and obviously it's going to affect different
points of the population at different times.
Health anxiety is quite normal, it's a thing we
see often and it can be treated really well
by some psychological therapy, some counselling, CBT, all that
sort of thing, if you find that it's continuing
after all the coronavirus and everything else has moved
on and after it's been more contained.
So please keep yourself safe, look after each
other, try to keep as rational as possible.
If you need or have any questions or
you want any more advice, please don't hesitate
to comment or leave your feedback.
We're more than happy to get back to you
and we'll try to give you advice, like I
said, that is on the government websites or the
NHS, because that's where the best information is at
this moment in time, so take care of yourself.
Please listen to the next few podcasts are
coming out over the next few weeks.
And for a while, this is just me signing
off as a therapy guy, saying goodbye for now. Thank you.
Bye.