Skip to:Content
|
Bottom
Cover image for It's not all in your head : how worrying about your health could be making you sick--and what you can do about it
Title:
It's not all in your head : how worrying about your health could be making you sick--and what you can do about it
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
New York, NY : Guilford Press, 2005
ISBN:
9781593851460
Added Author:

Available:*

Library
Item Barcode
Call Number
Material Type
Item Category 1
Status
Searching...
30000010103792 RC533 A85 2005 Open Access Book Book
Searching...

On Order

Summary

Summary

Where do you go for help when no one believes you're really sick? The doctors can't explain your symptoms, but you know there's something wrong because you can sense it in your body. Living with the specter of an unresolved health issue isn't just painful, it's isolating. The preoccupation and stress it causes can disrupt your career or interfere with personal relationships. If you continually experience symptoms of illness, or worry a lot about disease, you may be suffering from health anxiety--a condition that can produce physical effects of its own, including muscle tension, nausea, and a quickened heart rate. In this compassionate and empowering book, noted psychologists Gordon J. G. Asmundson and Steven Taylor provide simple and accurate self-tests designed to help you understand health anxiety and the role it might be playing in how you feel. Concrete examples and helpful exercises show you how to change thought and behavior patterns that contribute to the aches, pains, and anxiety you're experiencing. The authors also explain how to involve friends and family--and when to seek professional help--as you learn to stay well without worry.

Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies (ABCT) Self-Help Book of Merit


Author Notes

Gordon J. G. Asmundson, PhD, is Professor and Canadian Institutes of Health Research Investigator in Psychology and Kinesiology and Health Studies at the University of Regina, Canada, and Adjunct Professor of Psychiatry at the University of Saskatchewan. Dr. Asmundson is well known for his award-winning research in the areas of anxiety disorders, health anxiety, and acute and chronic pain.

Steven Taylor, PhD, ABPP, is a clinical psychologist and Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of British Columbia, Canada. Dr. Taylor has also received several prestigious research awards. His work focuses on cognitive-behavioral treatments and anxiety disorders.

Together, Drs. Asmundson and Taylor are the authors of a related professional book, Treating Health Anxiety , also published by Guilford.


Table of Contents

I Understanding Health Anxiety
1 Do I Worry Too Much about My Health?
2 Body and Brain: It's Not All in Your Head
3 Do I Have Some Other Anxiety Disorder?
4 Sick and Sad: Am I Depressed, Too?
II Breaking the Health Anxiety Cycle
5 Understanding and Managing Stress
6 Thoughts That Influence Your Anxiety and How to Change Them
7 Behaviors That Influence Your Anxiety and How to Change Them
III Maintaining Your Gains
8 Dealing with Doctors
9 Helping Friends and Family Help You
10 Living Life and Maintaining Your Gains
Resources
Go to:Top of Page