Stein and colleagues searched for published and unpublished trials of pharmacotherapy for treatment of social phobia. |
|
A phobia is an irrational, uncontrollable fear of a specific object or situation. |
|
Jane is one of thousands in this country who suffer from a phobia or obsessive compulsive disorder. |
|
After recent experiences, I have developed a phobia for knots, and I try to reduce the number as much as possible. |
|
Most people only know a very few of the more common words formed using the suffix phobia. |
|
Hypnosis has been shown to be effective in reducing needle phobia, even in stressful situations such as dental treatments or lumbar puncture. |
|
The result had been that he'd eventually dulled down the phobia to an aversion in regard to cats, and the gynecophobia had worn off. |
|
Today, the only widely accepted way to fight a phobia is with real-world experimentation and acclimation. |
|
The treatment of Cacophobia using various phobia therapies sometimes take a long time in duration of months or years. |
|
As Parkinson's disease took hold, he developed a phobia about the cracks between paving stones. |
|
The current classification by pathology puts word salad with word salad, obesity with obesity, and phobia with phobia. |
|
It occurs to me that you have slighted the most important member of the phobia family, and that is pyrophobia. |
|
When she told me she has a phobia about wearing anything on her wrist, I gave her a pendant watch. |
|
Marian has also indirectly experienced two accidents involving heights, adding to her phobia. |
|
An uxorious man, he had brought to Australia his wife Vanessa, despite her phobia about flying. |
|
I am not a dragon and I will thank you to pass that on to any others your age who share this absurd phobia! |
|
Fear of failure can become too drastic, threatening many who develop a phobia called atychiphobia. |
|
The three-year-old bearded collie has developed a phobia to firework explosions. |
|
Stress-induced destructive behavior may also result from a phobia to thunderstorms or other loud noises. |
|
One such disorder is a phobia, which involves fear and avoidance of a certain type of stimulus or event above and beyond what is rational. |
|
|
For people with a bird phobia, ornithophobia, birds are terrifying creatures, no matter how harmless they may really be. |
|
Fear of death seems to me to be a phobia, i.e. an unreasonable, groundless fear. |
|
Over time, I have developed a near phobia regarding the varmints to the point where I don't even like them mentioned. |
|
They need to reintegrate him back into the school so he isn't given a phobia of the place. |
|
Instead of believing that, I have, being the deviously intelligent person I am, found out a way to curb this phobia of mine. |
|
I have always had a phobia about pregnancy and childbirth, the whole idea of it repulses me beyond belief. |
|
It remains true that homophobia should not be encouraged any more than any other phobia. |
|
The best treatment for phobia is a psychological treatment called cognitive behavioural therapy. |
|
A phobia is only considered a disorder when it keeps you from living a normal life. |
|
The antitax phobia that has taken hold of the GOP remains the biggest obstacle to reaching a deal. |
|
About twice as many women as men are said to have panic disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, agoraphobia, and specific phobia. |
|
If you had a phobia about worms, you may not rush out and buy a wormery, but you're also not going to flee screaming from the garden at the sight of a worm. |
|
This feature alone will be helpful to the many individuals with social phobia who use alcohol or drugs to self-medicate or who experience the paralysis of depression. |
|
Fear of dead bodies is a known phobia which is surprisingly common. |
|
A fear of dental treatment might well have helped create more comfortable surgical processes and environments, but it might be glib to say that the chief phobia among designers is cacophobia. |
|
People with autophobia are constantly afraid of being self-harmed and about 5 percent of world population suffers from this phobia and it requires extensive therapy and hypnosis. |
|
This inertia is reinforced by a cultural phobia that has been instilled by over a century of excessive hygienics ideology. |
|
Can evolutionary theory offer any well-grounded, empirically testable hypothesis for my phobia? |
|
The use of insects inside the box was also approved, to exploit a phobia Abu Zubaydah had. |
|
Card sharks Reverse charges Too hot to touch Group therapy Fantasy or phobia? |
|
|
Just one part of this is the energy phobia according to which we need to put up with the Russians, or they will turn off the gas tap. |
|
The phobia was created by the lack of leadership by a government over there. |
|
This phobia is fueled by the perceived risks of radiation exposure, whether fact or fantasy. |
|
The sedation clinic was created to treat healthy children who have dental phobia. |
|
Given the stigma and phobia that is linked to HIV, education must be mandatory if it is to have the greatest impact. |
|
This potential is exacerbated when the phobia of radiation exposure and radioactive materials is interjected into the equation. |
|
Another funny thing I noticed was his phobia to cross roads. |
|
A phobia is an abnormal fear, which interrupts our ability to function normally in a social or work situation. |
|
They also had greater chances to experience obsessive-compulsive disorder, separation anxiety and social phobia. |
|
From the traditional duties of lover, empowerer and admirer, some of the great muses have expanded the repertory to become phobia alleviators, spin doctors and lockers of husbands in rooms. |
|
But what can begin as normal, everyday anxiety, can develop into something more serious, like a panic, phobia, or obsessional disorder. |
|
What we say Pedicures are not my favourite treatment as I have a weird phobia of nail-bothering, and hate showing people my feet. |
|
This can include active and aggressive resistance to the school environment, official exclusion, passive resistance, truancy, drop-outs, and school phobia. |
|
Phobic anxiety disorders and, in particular, panic disorder with agoraphobia and social phobia, appear to be most highly associated with alcohol use disorders. |
|
A phobia is considered a psychiatric disorder when it interferes with normal social functioning, such as in claustrophobia or nomophobia. |
|
And Germany's digital phobia is driven not just by cultural memory, but also by firms that want the state to protect their business models and keep competitors out. |
|
In fact, all I had to show for my work was a phobia of piano practice, a few unimpressive canvases, and a weak foul shot. |
|
Without knowing about his essays, we could suspect some phobia, schizoid personality disorder, or even just shyness. |
|
Mr. Speaker, first, I want to correct a small error I made this morning when I said the member for Cumberland-Colchester-Musquodoboit Valley had a phobia of the media and was not talking about this. |
|
Do we need to sink into a health and regulatory phobia and drift? |
|
|
The more the first introduction to the dental practice is done at an early age, the better the child becomes accustomed to the environment without developing phobia of the dentist. |
|
The fear of travelling in a car is known as amaxophobia, and like any phobia there are different levels of how extreme the fear is. |
|
One phobia they don't have is gametophobia. No living-in-sin for them, only licit thrills. |
|
So sexism, racism, classism, homophobia, ableism, and the gigantic phobia against immigrants were just not possible around John Huggins. |
|
Mocking in particular Wolfe's phobia against dirt and his predilection for women, the cartoons were distributed among the British soldiers stationed at Quebec. |
|
In extreme cases phobia sufferers conceive a general fear of life, afraid even to set foot outside of their own homes, yet dying a thousand deaths. |
|
And lastly, every citizen should be able to rely on a basic social safety net so that anxiety about employment does not translate into a phobia about the changes the world market is bringing. |
|
One case of bird-and-feathers phobia involved a woman in her thirties who was too frightened to go outside. |
|
Meet mother-of-one Louisa Francis, whose bizarre phobia means she is terrified of buttons. |
|
However, India wished to have placed on record that it would review its position in the years ahead, given the tendency to add a new type of phobia to the draft resolution every year. |
|
Another approach more familiar to Lorna is phobia cure, used for people with belonephobia. |
|
One simple method for affecting a phobia cure is a concept developed through Neuro-Linguistic Programming. |
|
School avoidance and social phobia triggered by Haloperidol in patients with Tourette's disorder. |
|
Two cases of simple phobia demonstrate the inadequacies of both behavioral and psychodynamic theories. |
|
The psychiatrist took the view that he suffered from a specific phobia and adjustment disorder. |
|
Alongside a widespread media campaign based on expert advice and specific phobia cures, Leader will be managing online activities. |
|
The most unfortunate phobia to have is phobophobia being afraid of being afraid. |
|
People with social phobia tend to overestimate the degree to which they are going to make social blunders and subsequently be judged and ridiculed. |
|
Schmidt and Marratto, in Arthur Schafer's eyes, are mystagogues and obscurantists in the grip of a phobia. |
|
Selective Mutism is an example of extreme social phobia at an early age. |
|
|
This is a phobia called thanatophobia and you may find that confiding in your doctor will be helpful and you can also discuss your worries with your priest. |
|
He was so freaked out by a scene where a victim has his eyes gouged out that McDowell now has a phobia of eyedrops and can't bear anyone coming near his eyes. |
|
Also known as social phobia, social anxiety affects up to 1 in 10 adults and is characterised by a fear of social interactions and being negatively judged by others. |
|
As an example of this phobia class, James at 42 years old felt simultaneously confused and embarrassed by his agyrophobia, a fear of crossing streets. |
|
For example, Plaud found that the formation of snake classes was inhibited in individuals with a snake phobia, but the formation of flower classes was not. |
|