Active Living      Health News      Healthy Mind      Nutrition      Prevention      Women's Health

WHAT'S NEW

GAD: When worry is an illness

Is it just a regular run of stress, or are you struggling with generalized anxiety disorder?

By Lola Augustine Brown

Everybody worries to some extent, but for some, worry reaches excessive and uncontrollable levels. It can cause physical symptoms and take over your life. People who worry this much may be suffering from generalized anxiety disorder, commonly known as GAD, an underdiagnosed condition that affects about 2.1 per cent of Canadians each year, according to the Anxiety Disorders Association of Canada.

What distinguishes regular worrywarts from GAD sufferers is a matter of degree. "The key thing is that they [GAD sufferers] worry a lot and they constantly expect things to go badly or bad things to happen," says Dr. John Walker, PhD, clinical psychologist at the Anxiety Disorders Program at St. Boniface General Hospital in Winnipeg. "Often, people focus on one or two areas, e.g., they worry a lot about family and children, or their finances."

GAD diagnosis and symptoms
Fortunately, awareness about this condition is growing and the prognosis for sufferers is good -- provided you can get a diagnosis. Many people find out that they have GAD only after visiting their doctor with concerns about physical symptoms such as chronic fatigue, stomach pains, headaches or heart palpitations. Visiting your family doctor should be your first step in distinguishing whether you suffer from GAD.

Treatment and self-care
Certain medications effectively treat GAD but Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) has been shown to have more long-lasting results. Rather than treating symptoms with medication, CBT teaches people to make their worry more manageable.

Yoga and meditation are highly recommended for people suffering from GAD, as these practices teach you to calm your body and live in the moment. Exercise has also been shown to be highly beneficial in managing symptoms. The key thing is to seek help, so you know what you are dealing with and how to manage it.

Page 1 of 2

1. Generalized anxiety disorder: Diagnosis, symptoms treatment and self-care
2. Generalized anxiety disorder: How to find help
Articles

Stress: Good for your health?

How to love your life
More
Books

First Impressions: What You Don't Know About How O...

Mental Fitness for Life: 7 Steps to Healthy Aging
Feedback about this article

Sometimes, as in my instance, a thyroid problem ca...

Especially for women, anxiety can often be the res...
Add your feedback
More
 more articles
Related articles
Stress: Good for your health?
How to love your life
Why journalling is good for your health
New in Health & Fitness
Life lessons from comedy school
How to start a food journal
The dangers of not taking medications properly
New on this site
Letter from Kenya: a mother and daughter tell all
15 summer sandals and shoes
Slideshow: 8 great things to do in Hong Kong
Enter our contests


September Issue
Next Issue

All rights reserved: © 2008 Transcontinental Medias inc.
A Transcontinental 3W web site
Updating of web site content: Homemakers.com
Optimized for Internet Explorer 5, 800x600