VOLUME 30, NUMBER 18 THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1999
ReporterTop_Stories

Clinic offers treatment for anxiety disorders

By LOIS BAKER
News Services Editor

Anxiety disorders are extremely common in the U.S., affecting 23 million people each year. That's the bad news.

The good news is that there are effective treatments for most of these problems. Even better news is that in Western New York, sufferers can receive treatment at reduced cost at UB's Anxiety Disorders Clinic, which conducts a doctoral training program in clinical psychology.

The clinic was established in 1989 and currently trains between five and 10 future clinical psychologists a year.

Larry Hawk, assistant professor of psychology and director of the clinic, said there is a nationwide shortage of psychologists trained in the most current and most effective treatment methods for symptoms of anxiety.

"Many therapists still employ the more traditional treatments that use long-term Freudian-based approaches whose effectiveness is hard to measure generally, and which have not proved to be particularly effective for anxiety," he said.

Hawk and Michael Raulin, clinical associate professor of psychology and founder of the clinic, train doctoral students in the treatment approach called cognitive behavior therapy, in which the therapist serves more as an educator and coach than an analyst.

"Rather than search for the beginnings of the problem, cognitive behavioral treatment is more focused on the present," Hawk said. "We try to determine how the problem is affecting clients' lives right now and find ways to help them meet their immediate goals. The treatment is more active and collaborative than traditional methods, aimed at changing behavior, thought patterns and bodily responses associated with the problem.

"This type of treatment has shown repeatedly to be very effective in people who have anxiety," Hawk said. "It's really rather remarkable."

Anxiety disorders involve one or more of the following scenarios, which occur frequently over weeks or months, are excessive or irrational, and interfere with work, relationships or other aspects of life, Hawk said:

- Intense fears of particular situation or objects, such as animals, injections, the sight of blood or social interactions

- Excessive worry about general situations, such as health, money, family and work

- Repeated "panic attacks," or feelings of fear or terror that strike suddenly and repeatedly, often accompanied by racing heart, sweating, dizziness or choking sensations

- Recurrent distressing intrusive thoughts or images, intense doubt or repetitive behaviors, such as checking or hand-washing, used to reduce anxiety

- Intense fear or feelings of numbness following a traumatic experience.

Treatment for these problems at the Anxiety Disorders Clinic is provided by doctoral students, supervised by Hawk and Raulin. Most of the treatments involve 12-16 sessions lasting one to two hours. Hawk noted that for persons without insurance or those with limited coverage, professional treatment for anxiety symptoms can be prohibitive. Treatment provided through the UB clinic is offered at a reduced fee because it is part of a doctoral training program.

For more information about the clinic, call the Psychological Services Center at 645-3697.




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