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Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Free yourself from emetophobia: Veale

 Free yourself from emetophobia: Veale

Contents

Chapter 1 What is Emetophobia 1

Chapter 2 What keeps emetophobia going 3

Chapter 3 Cognitive Behaviour Therapy 6

Chapter 4 Defining your problems and goals 7

Chapter 5 Actively defeating your Emetophobia 7

Chapter 6 Understanding and dealing with common obstacles 10

Chapter 7 Bringing it all together 12

Chapter 8 Medical treatments for emetophobia 12

Chapter 9 Considering your support network 13

Chapter 10 Advice for friends families and partners 13


Chapter 1 What is Emetophobia

Generally a fear of self being sick, occasionally purely other (rather than other infects me and I am sick)

 

Images

Can have intrusive images, flashback, to that awful time, or flashforward to that awful time.

The images will be of disgust of other judgement, of lack of control

 

Fear

Of uncertainty, will I or wont I get it

 

Physical

There is often an accompanied nausea , uncomfortable feelings in the stomach what accompany a fear of being sick.

 

Emotions

Anxiety

 

Thoughts

That it will go on for ever

That others will find me repulsive if I’m sick

 

Attention

Self focused

 

Behaviours

Avoidance of threats: food poisoning, ill people. Both are checked and restricted

 

Feeling sick and vomiting are difficult to avoid at some point it will happen.

90% of sufferers are women.  Men may feel more shame to admit it, women are more hygienic, more sensitive to being revolting and more likely to develop contamination fears in OCD.

 

OCD a problem with uncertainty if someone will vomit is on the continuum up to emetophobia

 

There is often repetitive behaviour to prevent being sick

Check sell by dates

Cooking excessively

Check if people are sick

Not sit close to people

Excessive hand washing

 

Comorbidity

OCD and emetophobia on a spectrum around fear of contamination

Emetophobia and social anxiety 10-20% comorbid, fear of being judged as revolting

Emetophobia and health anxiety: strong similarities, worry about sickness, avoidance sick triggers, body checking, only difference one is a fear of serious illness the other a fear of vomit

Emetophobia and panic attacks, people can experience panic attacks when they fear they will vomit

 

Chapter 2 What keeps emetophobia going

Old Brain: reptilian: threat\drive system: triune brain

Emetophobia

Threat system over engaged

Drive system as a defence: keep busy

 

Threat of emetophobia made by the new brain, enacted by the old brain, as the threat and drive system, go into service of the new brain. Whilst the threat starts with the new brain, gets the old brain involved, then the new brain, cant turn off the old brain but rationalising.

 

The emotions that play a part of emetophobia are anxiety, through the fear of becoming sick. Disgust at the act of being sick. Emetophobics have stronger and more sensitive producers of disgust experiences.   Disgust may also be associated with a sign of danger.  Anger is involved at the person who might threaten sickness on you, but that person could be yourself. Anger can also be at yourself for not doing something you wanted to do because of emetophobia.

 

Early life experiences.

People might have vomited, and believed\were they were abandoned, shamed, harshly judged, laughed at,  and the associate vomiting with that.  There might be the ideas that they were seen as disgusting and not the vomit, i.e. their behaviour. When they vomited they might have experienced it as violent, and them as out of control, they might not have been comforted, rather shamed.

 

Environmental factors

Seeing a loved one vomit then becoming seriously ill.

Abuse at the time of the vomiting episode

Over protective parents : their implied awfulness of  vomiting.

Being physically vulnerable and catching a vomiting bug

 

Personality factors

Emetophobics have a strong sense of internal control, that they can control what happens to them

Physical factors

Higher levels of somatization, i.e. expressing emotions physical

 

What maintains emetophobia

Expectancy of vomiting, through thoughts, and physical feelings.

Judging vomiting as being 10% awful

 

Vicious cycle

Anxious thoughts about vomiting

Anxiety

Somatised into physical feelings

Increases fear that I will be sick

 

Short term payoff long term problem

Worrying\reassurance seeking: (however they focus on the problem reinforce how awful it is, and increase its perceived likelihood)

Self focussed attention and looking for danger: again stimulate feeling sin the body, increase the sense of the awfulness of it,  Increases belief that you can control vomiting, but when you need to vomit you cant stop it, and that’s a good thing!

Avoidance: maintains the belief in the awfulness, shrinks your world, and leads you to not learn how to manage situation, or indeed to find out you can manage a lot better than you think. Avoidance maintains anxiety as the next time you face the situation you feel anxious and have to avoid it.

Safety seeking and compulsive behaviours e.g. checking sell by, over cooking, handwashing. Here every time we do them, we are reminding ourselves how awful vomit is, that we can protect ourselves against it and that actually we will be safe if we don’t do them (self perpetuating)

The awfulness of vomiting also increases with the levels of effort you put into stopping it (paradoxically)

 

A diagram of a flower

Description automatically generated

 

 

Chapter 3 Cognitive Behaviour Therapy

Emetophobia: peoples anxiety is somatised,  they scan their bodies and believe their body sensations are a sign that they will  vomit, they will lose control and it will be truly awful. This relates to safety seeking behaviours and avoidance.

 

Psychoeducation:

A reflex for humans, when our body thinks it has ingested a toxin.  Rats don’t vomit, that’s why rat poison works so well.  You stop vomiting when there’s nothing in the stomach, vomiting might be horrible but it has a distinct start and end.

 

Theory A: You are at risk of vomiting any time. Vomiting is awful, you will lose control and it and your anxiety will go on for ever,  a fate worse than death, and you cannot bear it. You must engage in SSBs, and avoid many things.

(This is an anxiety problem and gets maintained with the vicious flower)

Theory B: Vomiting is unpleasant, useful and you can bear it. This is a problem of vomit, and we will assume it is true.  The problem you have is because you are trying to not vomit!

(This is  a pathogen and biology problem)

 

With Theory A\B we can use behavioural experiments to test if its more A, does the problem get worse with changes in emotions for instance.

 

Erp: Graded exposure key to emetophobia, to learn that avoidance and safety behaviours aren’t needed, so reduces the maintenance of the fear

 

Image rescripting:  Rescript, rebuild and loving eyes;

 

Chapter 4 Defining your problems and goals

Rate severity of emetophobia

Define the problem by rating varies domains of your life and how much emetophobia gets in the way of it.

Set SMART goals

 

Chapter 5 Actively defeating your Emetophobia

The length of the problem, the more effort you will need to put into it. Testing predictions, ERP and drop safety behaviours.  More effort you put in at the beginning the greater your momentum.

With emetophobia the aim is to tolerate its related anxiety and disgust, so that you can act in ways that are important to you and not to manage your anxiety and disgust. Whilst it is important to face you fears and to learn that they are disproportionate, having techniques to manage anxiety can help if the emotions are very strong.

Techniques to tolerate anxiety

1.      Slow breathing

a.      Make sure your outbreath is 2 beats longer than your in breath.  Breathe into the belly

2.      Connect with others\and the world: there is a tendency to have self focussed attention which enhances the anxiety, really look at a plant, bird, person, talk to them, listen to them.  Get some emotional support for what you are doing is hard, not rather getting reassurance that you wont be sick

3.      Cold water

a.      Put your face in cold water, which stimulates your parasympathetic nervous system

4.      Grounding technique

a.      5:1

 

ERP

Face a manageable level of fear of something that is important to you.

Learn you can tolerate the anxiety.

Let the anxiety\your body learn there is nothing scary in this situation (the only scary thing is the anxiety!)

Anxiety isn’t pleasant but it isn’t going to harm you.

Anxiety and disgust help you prepare for a threat, but what if there isn’t a threat, what if it is a false alarm.

For every step on the graded hierarchy it is important to stay with the anxiety until it has reduced by at least half.

Jumping around the hierarchy is more effective than a linear approach.

Chaining exposure tasks can be powerful, so eat a food you might avoid in a busy public place, then read in the car on the way home.

Practice once a day, to build up momentum.

During your exposure act as if theory b is true.       

Notice  subtle SSBs whilst doing exposure, mental reassurance, small sips of water.

Be compassionate to yourself, speak in soothing tones, to encourage yourself to do something difficult.

 

Behavioural experiments

Drop SSBs and see what the effect is: Test theory A.

Person fake vomits in public: see what happens

Eat food you have avoided: see what happens

Don’t over cook: see what happens

 

So Theory A: it could happen any time, it would be awful you need to protect yourself, and we can understand this via a vicious flower, and that it’s a problem of anxiety

Theory B, its  a vomit problem, its unpleasant, it will happen, you can bear it.

 

Image/Memory work

Change the image

Different characters, different form, don’t end at the worst point.

Most images problems end at the worst point!!

Rescript the image: Relive, rescript and loving eyes.

 

Changing your thinking

Change your relationship with your thoughts via mindfulness.

 

Reassurance seeking

Key distinction between assurance which is a one off that things will be ok, to reassurance, repeated questioning that things will be ok.

 

Working with attention

Our attention goes to our body and “abnormal” sensations, or threats in our environment. We are laser focussed on the problem and its solutions, so we need to widen our attention to positive, neutral and negative things that are not related to vomit.

Learn when you are not anxious, use when you are:

Pick a sense, I’ve used sound

1.      Sound attention: notice sounds, close, near, far away. Listen mindfully.

2.      Switch attention between them. Spend a minute on each one

3.      Practice and when mastered then use it when anxious to switch your attention to something less threatening

 

Working with Worry

Worry isn’t like problem solving, its about things outside of our control, its about getting a sense of certainty over something (even though you cant be).

Monitor your worries and classify them

Have they happened, can you control them?

If you cant do anything about it, then commit to something different, if you can do something about it then do it. Best doing something different is something that you value that takes up mental energy. You could do something about vomit, if I vomit then, which would be vomit safety plan. When I vomit, what would be nice is, this would be as opposed to avoiding vomit at all cost.

 

Chapter 6 Understanding and dealing with common obstacles

 

Trying too hard to be perfect

Don’t achieve, so stop

Putting effort into the right\best therapist\approach\understanding etc, slows you down.

Rather just start, and try to improve things for yourself, with good enough.

 

Fear of making things worse

You will fear dropping your SSBs will make things worse and you will vomit, but

Emetophobics and non Emetophobics have the same rates of vomiting.

 

Fear of looking back and regretting change

You feel comfortable where you are, known is better than unknown. Remind yourself of why you are doing this.  Think of your eulogy would you want it contain lived a life protecting yourself from vomit?

 

Wanting coping techniques and mechanisms

This would just be new SSBs and leave the belief in place that vomit is awful and I must control it. CBT aims to get you to say vomiting is possible, rare, but possible. Unpleasant but tolerable.

 

Shame and self criticism

Shame can prevent opening up about your difficulties. You might have shame about your initial vomit incident, shame about your emetophobia, shame about difficulties in dealing with it, layers of shame.

 

Intolerance of discomfort

In ERP you are building up your distress tolerance amongst other things. Mindfulness can help

 

Not enough time

Evaluate available time, can you save some time, is now the right time?

 

Insufficient dose of deliberate practice

Don’t leave too longer gap between ERPs as you want to build up momentum, like bicycling down a hill, like taking a plaster off its easier just to do it, not to think about it, or try to do it slowly.

 

Chapter 7 Bringing it all together

Monitor your progress and build evidence for Theory B

Rate your goal progress

Consolidate what you’ve learnt, in terms of maintenance cycle and techniques

Managing lapses, relapse prevention. What do you need to keep doing to stay healthy?

Early warning signs of lapse, and response.

 

Chapter 8 Medical treatments for emetophobia

There is anti nausea medication, but emetophobics nausea is caused by anxiety.  Anti nausea drugs don’t stop you being sick.

SSRI

Possibly after CBT for severe emetophobia\OCD. Effects start at 4 weeks, and it can take up to 16 weeks to see the full effect.  Stay on it for 12 weeks before deciding if it does\doesn’t work.

The worst side effects are at the start and they reduce, although not sexual difficulties.  Side effects more likely with a big increase in dose.

Side effects

Short term

Diarrhoea/Constipation

Nausea

Headaches

Sweating

Dry mouth

Tremor

Sleepiness

Emotional numbness

Sexual problems: cant orgasm, lose libido

Loss of appetite

Agitation

 

 

 

Chapter 9 Considering your support network

Can be helpful to have a support network when doing something hard like this, to encourage and comfort, to celebrate, all of which will help you to progress.

 

However, people can misunderstand your problems, which can leave you feeling isolated.

But you can explain your thoughts and feelings and the impact it has  let them know it’s the most common specific phobia in UK

 

Friends and family

They may be difficult to use as a support  network as

They may make judgements about you, gossip about you, you may worry about them being a burden, they , may minimize your problems, you may feel shame.

Emotional support is different from reassurance seeking. Emotional support is when you are having a hard time, is validating, encouraging, listening and the like. Reassurance is when someone tells you repeatedly that you aren’t going to vomit\panic etc.

Whilst it might be scary to do, opening up to the right friends and family can be very powerful to get emotional support (and not reassurance).

 

Equality act, says workplaces cant treat you differently due to your mental health, if it affects your long term ability to perform your duties, so it cant discriminate, so adaption needs to be made.  Employers cant ask about your mental health before offering you a job. Employers must prevent you being harassed.

 

Chapter 10 Advice for friends families and partners

Supporting a person with emetophobia is about supporting, encouraging, helping them manage their distress, championing them and celebrating their successes. They need to face their fears to find out they are ungrounded, what keeps their problem going is avoiding their fears. They need to be able to see their anxiety is tolerable and is not indicative of something bad happening.

Agree with them what would be helpful from you, and how.

Children with emetophobia as they are less able to label emotions, will typically report physical problems.