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View Full Version : Do you really have health anxiety?



skippy66
05-03-14, 11:19
The realisation that I had health anxiety was one of the major steps on my road to recovery from it. It's not easy to accept as you think that you have a real disease. But here are some of the signs of it:

1. You badger your doctor for tests - you keep going to the doctor and push them to arrange the tests you think you need (after extensive Googling) to rule out whatever it is you think you have.

2. All your tests come back normal - from blood tests to MRI scans, all the tests you have all come back within normal limits. Maybe something's a bit off, e.g. high potassium, which sends you running back to Dr Google.

3. You can't help yourself from Googling symptoms - you frequently consult Dr Google for advice and reassurance.

4. You go from OK to 'I'm going to die' in an instant - this is kind of like a panic response. You're just sat there watching the TV and you feel a twinge in your chest. In 1 second you go from relaxed to 'I'm having a heart attack HELP', and this may escalate into a full-blown panic attack.

5. Your mind is focused on your symptoms all the time - you're constantly thinking about your symptoms, and it disrupts your life. It makes you cancel things, it affects your relationships, social life, work life. You're in a cycle of constant worrying about your body.

6. You avoid medical things on TV - even a static online ad about stroke symptoms can send you into a free fall of panic. You refuse to watch House or Casualty or similar programs lest they remind you of your own terminal diseases, or scare you. You hate it when you overhear people talking about people who have died.

7. A fear of funeral parlours - you hate going to funerals (who doesn't), but this is more than just hate - it's pure fear. You hate even seeing a sign above a funeral director's door.

8. You hate hospitals - because they remind you of health stuff. You see ill people and it makes you scared that you're going to wind up like that.

9. When you go away for a day or weekend, your symptoms radically improve - this was the key one for me. I would sit at home for weeks on end locked in a horrible cycle of symptoms and anxiety. But if I had to go away for something, holiday or work excursion, I would find that my mind was so distracted that I would not have time to notice any symptoms, or dwell on them if they did happen. Distraction is probably the most important part of the health anxiety 'cure'.

10. You don't want to do stuff - you just have a general apathy to anything.

11. You don't look forward to things - what's the point of looking forward to my birthday meal tomorrow, I'll probably be dead by the end of the day.

12. You confide in your partner/spouse - I was constantly telling my wife what was up with me just in case it escalated. I needed an outlet and she was it. I burdened her with all my symptoms, looking back I think what was I doing??? I even went as far as telling her if I'd had any medication, e.g. 'I just took 2 ibuprofen for a headache', so that if I ended up in A&E she could tell the doctors what I'd taken and when. Ridiculous I know, but not at the time!


Do any of these resonate with your own situation?

If they do you probably have health anxiety.

The good news is that you can get completely better.

SarahH
05-03-14, 11:42
Yep... all of them skippy:)

WhyWhyWhy
05-03-14, 11:44
All except 1 & 2 because I'm too scared of the doctor, tests and hospitals :blush:

Tanner40
05-03-14, 12:01
As always Skippy, great post. And yes, we can get rid of Health Anxiety. I find that distraction, along with acceptance is the key to my recovery. Distraction helps me to take my mind off of the physical symptoms and helps to get me out of my own head. As long as I stay inside my own head, focused on that one little symptom, it never gets any better. That one symptom will escalate to additional symptoms. Then on to a full blown panic attack, we go.
Acceptance was the hardest thing for me and it took loads of practice. Just sitting with the physical symptoms and breathing through the situation. Believing in my heart and my head that it was nothing but anxiety was so important.
Practicing distraction and acceptance takes the away the power of anxiety and allows us to recover and live our lives once again.
As always, great hearing from you.

WhyWhyWhy
05-03-14, 12:07
Number 9 is so true for me. Take me out of my comfort zone and I am miraculously 80% better

anthrokid
05-03-14, 12:10
Great post, Skippy!

I really hope that some sufferers benefit from your words of wisdom and find the strength and courage to accept HA and work on moving forward.

Best wishes to you :)

NotCool
05-03-14, 12:16
I can relate to most of these. Maybe not with the hospital feeling, since whenever i'm in the hospital, the care and professionalism that the medical workers, makes me feel kind of safe, secure and glad, that someone is dealing with "my problems".

skippy66
05-03-14, 16:13
All except 1 & 2 because I'm too scared of the doctor, tests and hospitals :blush:

Yeah there are 2 types of health anxiety when it comes to hospitals, doctors etc.

Spacedextra
05-03-14, 16:44
Wow. How grim - I pretty much have all of them! I tidied my entire house today as a form of distraction and it really did work... Gotta find someone who'll let me tidy their house tomorrow!

Fishmanpa
05-03-14, 16:47
#8 but not the last part... I just hate hospitals and for good reason...

Positive thoughts

MRS STRESS ED
05-03-14, 16:52
All except 1 & 2 because I'm too scared of the doctor, tests and hospitals :blush:

Me too it takes me ages to pluck up the courage to go ,but I always feel better for it when I do go x
skippy excellent post x

unsure_about_this
05-03-14, 19:57
yes to all of them. I did a placement in a funeral directors back in 2002 to 2003 doing a NVQ IT, why did the training provider sent me here, small team would benefit me because of my disability.
Also I had clear test results a few scans, I still feel I need to keep going back to the GPs, but scared I will get banned for not believe anybody.
I got bad health anxiety and going to give myself a break for the forum.

saab
05-03-14, 22:04
Yes to all of them at one time or another.

Have you ever noticed that the Health Anxiety forum is the most posted on forum, by a very large margin? I think when you are anxious your mind seeks out stuff to worry about, and a funny sensation or feeling is the the easiest thing to latch on to and obsess over.

skippy66
07-03-14, 10:21
Have you ever noticed that the Health Anxiety forum is the most posted on forum, by a very large margin? I think when you are anxious your mind seeks out stuff to worry about, and a funny sensation or feeling is the the easiest thing to latch on to and obsess over.

Whenever you check this forum there are at least 500 people browsing the Health Anxiety section. There's a good reason for this and it's to do with Google's algorithm. Hundreds of people have posted similar topics on here, mainly describing their symptoms. So when someone else is having those symptoms and they search Google for them, this site comes up near the top, as the chances are there are already multiple threads about the same thing. Many of these guys will just read the threads and go elsewhere, reassured that other people have the same problem as they do. But others will stick around, create an account and tell the community about their own situation - maybe it differs slightly, or they have another problem that they need reassurance about.

The fact is that most people on the planet get worried about their symptoms at one time or another. It is those who dwell on them and catastrophise about them who develop health anxiety. The key is distraction. This stops reassurance-seeking behaviour.

Dexterjames
07-03-14, 10:41
I get all of them but When i go out sometimes i feel worse especially if i go to work i cant turn my mind of the symptoms i have so it makes them worse and i get panic.I don't mind the hospital i think its because i would get constantly checked up so it would make me feel better.

Freaked
07-03-14, 17:49
Good criteria. It's difficult for me to figure out if I have 'irrational' health anxiety or not because I have a disabling illness and some weird unexplained stuff. I do get very scared I'm going to die when most doctors have told me I'm not, but considering all I've been through I'm not sure if this is weird or not. And my illness causes large adrenaline releases which make it very difficult not to be agitated and panicky. But I definitely do suffer from severe anxiety about my health, whether it's 'normal' or not.