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Mental Health - Phobias
Minding your Mental Health
Healthy Living

A phobia is an irrational fear of a specific situation, activity or object. The phobia compels the sufferer to avoid whatever is feared because with it comes a number of troubling symptoms such as:

Phobias - 3 Basic Types

Specific Phobias. These are sometimes called simple phobias. The irrational fear is of specific objects, such as snakes, dogs, closed spaces or heights. (See box below for some common phobias and their uncommon names.)

Phobia Name: Fear of:
Acrophobia Heights
Arachneophobia Spiders
Asterophobia Thunder
Ceraunophobia Lightning
Claustrophobia Enclosed spaces
Hydrophobia Water
Mysophobia Dirt, Germs
Ophidiophobia Snakes
Nyctophobia Darkness
Pyrophobia Fire
Xenophobia Foreigners, Strangers
Zoophobia Animals

Most of the time, simple phobias develop during childhood and often go away with time. Those that continue into adulthood rarely go away without treatment.

Social Phobia. The irrational fear is of being embarrassed or humiliated in public. Examples of situations leading to this include:

Agoraphobia. The irrational fear is of being alone in public places from which the person:

Agoraphobia can occur with or without panic disorder. (See "Panic Attacks".) It most often comes after having panic attacks because the sufferer avoids the places where panic attacks occurred. He or she fears that something about the location caused the panic attack. The fear of having another panic attack can result in avoiding going out in public. In severe cases, persons with agoraphobia don't leave their home at all.

Treatment

Questions to Ask

Do you have all of these problems?

  • Panic Disorder (See "Panic Attacks".)
  • Anxiety about being in places or situations from which escape might be difficult or embarrassing or in which you could not get help if you had a panic attack
  • Avoidance of being alone in places outside of the home, such as ones that involve:
    • Being in a crowd
    • Standing in a line
    • Being on a bridge
    • Traveling in a car, bus or train
Yes: See Physician or See Counselor

No

 
Did you answer "yes" to parts two and three of the first question, but you don't have panic disorder or get panic attacks? Yes. See Counselor.

No

 
Are there certain objects or situations which cause you to feel intense fear or terror to the point that you lose control of yourself? Yes. See Counselor.

No

 
Do you avoid certain situations, objects, persons or places to the point that doing so is interfering with tasks you want to get done? Yes. See Counselor.

No

 

 

Self-Help

The following tips are ways to deal with phobias that do not disrupt your daily life. They may also be used with or after professional treatment.

What You Can Do for a Friend or Relative



This page last updated on February 25th, 2009.
Content last reviewed on February 24th, 2009.