NIMH Launches Anxiety Disorders PSA Campaign
Washington, D.C., April 7, 1998 Today the National Institute of Mental Health
(NIMH) launched a dramatic television and radio public service announcement (PSA) campaign
on anxiety disorders.
The PSAs portray the severely disabling fears associated with obsessive-compulsive
disorder, panic disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder, and send the hopeful message
that people living with these frightening mental illnesses can be successfully treated.
"Many of the 19 million Americans with anxiety disorders continue to suffer
because of stigma and the widespread lack of understanding that these are brain disorders,
as responsive to treatment as other medical disorders," said NIMH Director Steven E.
Hyman, M.D.
At a news conference in Washington, D.C., Dr. Hyman described recent advances in
neuroscience that have revealed how and where memories of fear are stored in the brain,
and how traumatic experience alters brain structure. "Our hope is that knowledge of
brain dysfunction will lead to the development of highly targeted treatments that will
greatly improve the lives of people with severe anxiety disorders," Dr. Hyman
commented.
People with anxiety disorders experience feelings of overwhelming fear and anxiety that
are chronic, unremitting and worsen progressively when left untreated. Tormented by panic
attacks, obsessive thoughts, flashbacks, nightmares and other frightening symptoms, some
people even become housebound. They may also suffer from depression and alcohol and drug
abuse.
Marc Summers, former television host of Nickelodeon's Double Dare, a children's game
show, lives with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), one of the anxiety disorders
profiled in the PSAs. Symptoms of OCD include recurrent, unwanted thoughts (obsessions) or
rituals (compulsions) that seem impossible to stop or control.
At the news conference, Summers reported that he first experienced the symptoms of OCD
when he was a young child, but was not diagnosed until he was an adult. In his case, he
was plagued by ritualistic cleaning and organizing.
"When I was a kid, I thought that if I did not clean and organize things
perfectly, something bad would happen to my parents," he said. "I was so caught
up in the rituals, I didn't even realize I had a problem."
Summers recalled the many hours he spent performing rituals, prior to getting
treatment, as well as the negative impact his behavior had on his family. He explained,
"That's why it's so important to teach people how to identify these illnesses, so
they can understand how to get treatment."
There are a variety of effective treatments available for anxiety disorders. These
include medication, specific forms of psychotherapy known as behavioral therapy and
cognitive-behavioral therapy, or a combination of medication and therapy.
The PSA campaign is one component of the NIMH Anxiety Disorders Education Program that
has already reached millions of people with information about anxiety disorders. The PSAs
are available here on the Web site. NIMH also provides consumers and medical and mental
health professionals with information about these disorders through a toll-free number,
1-88-88-ANXIETY.
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