Professional version
Offers theory, guidance, and prompts for mental health professionals. Downloads are in Fillable PDF format where appropriate.
Recognizing Panic Disorder outlines the ICD-11 diagnostic features to support therapists in identifying panic disorder in their clients.
Offers theory, guidance, and prompts for mental health professionals. Downloads are in Fillable PDF format where appropriate.
Panic attacks are discrete episodes of intense fear or apprehension which are accompanied by the rapid onset of characteristic physiological and cognitive symptoms (e.g. palpitations, shortness of breath, chest pain, lightheadedness, fear of imminent death). Panic disorder is characterised by the repeated occurrence of unexpected panic attacks. People who suffer from panic disorder also experience persistent concern about their reoccurrence, or about their significance, which leads to a significant impact upon their functioning.
Recognizing Panic Disorder presents the ICD-11 diagnostic criteria to help clinicians identify panic disorder in clients.
Panic disorder is a common mental health difficulty. This resource:
Designed for mental health professionals working with individuals affected by panic disorder.
Review the key features of panic disorder.
Identify symptoms of panic disorder in clients.
Discuss whether clients identify with symptoms of panic disorder.
Psychiatric diagnostic frameworks serve multiple purposes. Classification of mental disorders enables clinicians and researchers to speak a common language when describing patterns of experience and behavior, guide appropriate treatment interventions, and act as a coding system for insurance purposes. The success of these classification frameworks has varied across diagnoses but in the best cases has led to improved understanding and treatment of conditions, as well as helping many service users who find such classification valuable (Perkins et al, 2018).
Diagnostic frameworks are not without controversy. They have been criticized on grounds of reliability, validity, and distortions due to commercial interests (Zigler & Phillips, 1961; Frances & Widiger, 2012; Bell, 2017). Perhaps most importantly there are instances where they have had, and continue to have, extremely negative effects upon service users (Perkins et al, 2018). Diagnosis is not the only way of understanding people and their experiences. Many clinicians and their clients find that attending to personal stories and narratives is a helpful approach, and psychological formulation is one technique for bringing together information about what has happened to an individual and the sense that they have made of it (British Psychological Society, 2018).
Notwithstanding the above caveats, the ‘Recognizing...’ series from Psychology Tools is designed to aid clinicians in the recognition and understanding of common mental health problems.
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