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Coping With
Anxiety
During High Risk Terrorism Alerts
Advice from the American Psychiatric Association
Fear and anxiety are normal human reactions to a perceived threat or danger.
However, such uncertainty is manageable if people keep the threat in
perspective, the American Psychiatric Association said today.
The raised national terrorist threat index to high risk
provokes anxiety in all of us, says Paul S. Appelbaum, M.D., APA
President. But knowledge and information based on facts can help us
manage that understandable anxiety.
APA offers the following advice on
how to live with the fear and anxiety
caused by the recent increased alert:
- Educate yourself about the potential danger. Facts are frequently less
frightening than rumors and myth.
- If television or other news reports significantly increase feelings of
anxiety and helplessness, dont watch or read them; you dont need to
know every last detail. Television news of violence can be
frightening to
children, especially when it is viewed repetitively.
- Find ways to distract yourself from thinking about the potential for
harm. Get involved in an activity that you can control: work in the garden,
clean the basement, do volunteer work, take up an old hobby, take a time
out and go to the movies or a play.
- Take advantage of the weekends to refuel. A day or so away from normal
routinewhether spent at home or on a weekend getawaybreaks the
cycle of preoccupation with disaster.
- Talk about your anxiety with family or friends; avoid being alone.
- When you find yourself worrying about the unknown, mentally change the
subject.
- Avoid or at least minimize alcohol and caffeine intake; caffeine can add
to the jitters, and both disrupt sleep.
- Get regular exercise.
- If you smoke, dont increase your tobacco consumption. While it may
seem to ease anxiety in the short run, increased smoking poses significant
long-term health hazards.
- If you are uncontrollably fearful and preoccupied with the threat of
harm to the extent you cannot continue your daily activities, you should
consider talking to your physician or a mental health professional. Symptoms
that indicate a need for a medical evaluation include but are not limited to:
- Changes in eating and sleeping habits;
- Physical problems: stomach upsets, back and neck aches, headaches;
- Inability to focus or concentrate on the task at hand;
- Lack of interest in previously enjoyable activities; and
- Extreme fear of leaving your home.
Source: American Psychiatric Association, Feb. 2003
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