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Block 2.6. Anxiety & Stress: Problem 7 GAD(Generalized Anxiety Disorder) English Summary

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Block 2.6. Anxiety & Stress: Problem 7 GAD(Generalized Anxiety Disorder) English Summary Summary of everything discussed in the tutorials and the literature, The grade obtained for the course was 8.1

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PROBLEM 7. GENERALIZED ANXIETY 1
DISORDER



Generalized anxiety disorder: a preliminary test a
conceptual model (Michel J. Dugas, Fabien Gagnon, Robert
Ladouceur, Mark H. Freeston)
Introduction
Features

1. Intolerance uncertainty: the way individuals
perceive information in uncertain/ambiguous
situations and responds with set of cognitive,
emotional & behavioral reactions.
 Exacerbates and generates (in absence
of stimulus) “what if” questions.
 Highly related to worry
 Discriminates GAD and clinical
patients
o Ambiguity can distinguish worriers/non-worriers
but the level of difficulty cannot.

2. Beliefs: underscored in model but recent
studies shown a relationship bt worry-beliefs

 GAD patients claim that they get prepared for neg. outcomes
 Negative reinforcement of those beliefs by the non-occurrence of the event
3. Poor problem orientation: set of metacognitive processes that reflect awareness and
appraisal of everyday problems and one’s own problem solving ability.
 Changes in problem-solving confidence can have a causal effect on catastrophic
worrying.
 Poor perceived control
 Worrying >poor problem orientation not related to problem-solving skills (one
study)
4. Cognitive avoidance
 Worry made up of semantic cognitive activities and “verbal” thought (rather than
mental images)
 Worry >less somatic activation
 Avoidance of mental images and peripheral physiological activation > decrease in
emotional processing threatening material.
Hypotheses:
A. Intolerance of uncertainty, beliefs about worry, poor problem orientation and cognitive
avoidance will discrimate GAD patients from non-clinical controls
B. Intolerance of uncertainty will be the most important in explaining differences.
Method
Subjects: 24 GAD patients, 20 controls > GAD patients had an additional diagnosis.

, PROBLEM 7. GENERALIZED ANXIETY 2
DISORDER
Symptom Measures:
 Anxiety disorders interview schedule (ADIS-IV)
 Penn state worry questionnaire (PSWQ)
 Worry & Anxiety Questionnaire (WAQ)
 Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI): state anxiety
 Beck depression Inventroy- abridge (BDI-A)
Process Measures:
 Intolerance Uncertainty (IU)
 Why worry? (WW): for beliefs about worry
 White bear suppression inventory (WBSI): supression of thoughts
 Social problem solving inventroy- abridged (SPSI): problem orientation and problem
solving skills.
Results
Hypothesis was confirmed
 All variables except from problem solving skills were highly related to discrimimant
function and IU was the most important one in explaining group differences.
 So, IU key feature of GAD
Further examination by using these variables to clessify group membership and compare them to
symptom variables.
 Process variables > 82% correct classification (18/24 GAD and 18/20 CG)
 Symptom variables > 91% correct (22/24 GAD, 18/20 CG)
So, process varibles were equally effective to symptom variables for classifying non-
clinical subjects but not quite as effective for GAD classification.
Potential problems with the study
 Specificity assessment : By comparison to clinical control trial (some studies showed there
is specificity- GAD vs anxiety disorders- higher IU, porrer orientation and superior
problem-solving knowledge)
 Rate of comorbidity: all disorders were mild, not likely to have influences the discriminant
capacity
 GAD patient’s higher depression: recent studies showed that there is a narrow possibility
of depression influencing the discriminant ability
 Need to distinguish between IU and worry: studies did show they are separate constructs.
Treatment implications
 Overestimation/underestimation of pros/cons-beliefs in worrying: cognitive and
behavioral strtegies to decrease IU and acknowledge that the attempt to control future by
worrying is not viable option.
 Two types of worries
i. About immediate problems: should stop avoiding but also avoid the attempts to
gather detailed end excessive info for situation
ii. About future events: cognitive exposure to adress avoidance esp. for threatening
mental images.
o By using response prevention
o Cognitive exposure helps with IU decrease as well
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