fbpx
Wikipedia

Neurosis

Neurosis (pl.: neuroses) is a term mainly used today by followers of Freudian thinking to describe mental disorders caused by past anxiety, often that has been repressed. In recent history, the term has been used to refer to anxiety-related conditions more generally.

Neurosis
Other namesPsychoneurosis, neurotic disorder
SpecialtyPsychiatry, clinical psychology

The term "neurosis" is no longer used in condition names or categories by the World Health Organization's International Classification of Diseases (ICD) or the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM). According to the American Heritage Medical Dictionary of 2007, the term is "no longer used in psychiatric diagnosis".[1]

Neurosis is distinguished from psychosis, which refers to a loss of touch with reality. Its descendant term, neuroticism, refers to a personality trait of being prone to anxiousness and mental collapse. The term "neuroticism" is also no longer used for DSM or ICD conditions; however, it is a common name for one of the Big Five personality traits. A similar concept is included in the ICD-11 as the condition "negative affectivity".

History edit

A broad condition (1769-1879) edit

 
William Cullen coined the term neurosis.

The term neurosis was coined by Scottish doctor William Cullen to refer to "disorders of sense and motion" caused by a "general affection of the nervous system". The term is derived from the Greek word neuron (νεῦρον, 'nerve') and the suffix -osis (-ωσις, 'diseased' or 'abnormal condition'). It was first used in print in Cullen's System of Nosology, first published in Latin in 1769.[2]

Cullen used the term to describe various nervous disorders and symptoms that could not be explained physiologically. Physical features, however, were almost inevitably present, and physical diagnostic tests, such as exaggerated knee-jerks, loss of the gag reflex and dermatographia, were used into the 20th century.[3]

French psychiatrist Phillipe Pinnel's Nosographie philosophique ou La méthode de l'analyse appliquée à la médecine (1798) was greatly inspired by Cullen. It divided medical conditions into five categories, with one being "neurosis". This was divided into four basic types of mental disorder: melancholia, mania, dementia, and idiotism.[2]

Morphine was first isolated from opium in 1805, by German chemist Friedrich Sertürner. After the publication of his third paper on the topic in 1817,[4] morphine became more widely known, and used to treat neuroses and other kinds of mental distress.[5][6] After becoming addicted to this highly addictive substance, he warned "I consider it my duty to attract attention to the terrible effects of this new substance I called morphium in order that calamity may be averted."[7]

German psychologist Johann Friedrich Herbart used the term repression in 1824, in a discussion of unconscious ideas competing to get into consciousness.[8]

The tranquilising properties of potassium bromide were noted publicly by British doctor Charles Locock in 1857. Over the coming decades, this and other bromides were used in great quantities to calm people with neuroses.[6][9][10] This led to many cases of bromism.

Breuer, Freud and contemporaries (1880-1939) edit

 
Josef Breuer discovered the psychoanalytic technique of treating neurosis.

Austrian psychiatrist Josef Breuer first used psychoanalysis to treat hysteria in 1880–1882.[11] Bertha Pappenheim was treated for a variety of symptoms that began when her father suddenly fell seriously ill in mid-1880 during a family holiday in Ischl. His illness was a turning point in her life. While sitting up at night at his sickbed she was suddenly tormented by hallucinations and a state of anxiety.[12] At first the family did not react to these symptoms, but in November 1880, Breuer, a friend of the family, began to treat her. He encouraged her, sometimes under light hypnosis, to narrate stories, which led to partial improvement of the clinical picture, although her overall condition continued to deteriorate.

According to Breuer, the slow and laborious progress of her "remembering work" in which she recalled individual symptoms after they had occurred, thus "dissolving" them, came to a conclusion on 7 June 1882 after she had reconstructed the first night of hallucinations in Ischl. "She has fully recovered since that time" were the words with which Breuer concluded his case report.[13] Accounts differ on the success of Pappenheim's treatment by Breuer. She did not speak about this episode in her later life, and vehemently opposed any attempts at psychoanalytic treatment of people in her care.[14] Breuer was not quick to publish about this case.

(Subsequent research has suggested Pappenheim may have had one of a number of neurological illnesses. This includes temporal lobe epilepsy,[15][16][17] tuberculous meningitis,[18] and encephalitis.[17] Whatever the nature of her condition, she went on to run an orphanage, and then found and lead the Jüdischer Frauenbund for twenty years.)

The term psychoneurosis was coined by Scottish psychiatrist Thomas Clouston for his 1883 book Clinical Lectures on Mental Diseases.[19] He describes a condition that covers what is today considered the schizophrenia and autism spectrums (a combination of symptoms that would soon become better known as dementia praecox).

French neurologist Jean-Martin Charcot came to believe that psychological trauma was a cause of some cases of hysteria. He wrote in his book Leçons sur les maladies du système nerveux, (1885-1887) (and published in English as Clinical Lectures on the Diseases of the Nervous System):[20]

Quite recently male hysteria has been studied by Messrs. Putnam [1884] and Walton [1883][21] in America, principally as it occurs after injuries, and especially after railway accidents. They have recognised, like Mr. Page, [1885] who in England has also paid attention to this subject, that many of those nervous accidents described under the name of Railway-spine, and which according to them would be better described as Railway-brain, are in fact, whether occurring in man or woman, simply manifestations of hysteria.[20]

Charcot documented around two dozen cases where psychological trauma appears to have caused hysteria.[22] In some cases, the results are described like the modern concept of PTSD.[22]

Austrian psychiatrist Sigmund Freud was a student of Charcot in 1885–6.[23] In 1893 Freud credited Charcot with being the source of "all the modern advances made in the understanding and knowledge of hysteria."[24]

French psychiatrist Pierre Janet released his book L'automatisme psychologique (Psychological automatism) in 1889, its third chapter detailing his understanding of hypnosis and the unconscious. At this time, he claimed that the main aspect of psychological trauma is dissociation (a disconnection of the conscious mind from reality).[25] (Freud would later claim Janet as a major influence.)[26]

In 1891, Thomas Clouston published Neuroses of Development,[27] which covered a wide range of physical and mental developmental conditions.

Breuer came to mentor Freud. The pair released the paper "Ueber den psychischen Mechanismus hysterischer Phänomene. (Vorläufige Mittheilung.)" (known in English as "On the physical mechanism of hysterical phenomena: preliminary communication") in January 1893. It opens with:

 
Sigmund Freud established psychoanalysis as the dominant treatment for many mental conditions.

A chance observation has led us, over a number of years, to investigate a great variety of different forms and symptoms of hysteria, with a view to discovering their precipitating cause the event which provoked the first occurrence, often many years earlier, of the phenomenon in question. In the great majority of cases it is not possible to establish the point of origin by a simple interrogation of the patient, however thoroughly it may be carried out. This is in part because what is in question is often some experience which the patient dislikes discussing; but principally because he is genuinely unable to recollect it and often has no suspicion of the causal connection between the precipitating event and the pathological phenomenon. As a rule it is necessary to hypnotize the patient and to arouse his memories under hypnosis of the time at which the symptom made its first appearance; when this has been done, it becomes possible to demonstrate the connection in the clearest and most convincing fashion...

It is of course obvious that in cases of 'traumatic' hysteria what provokes the symptoms is the accident. The causal connection is equally evident in hysterical attacks when it is possible to gather from the patient's utterances that in each attack he is hallucinating the same event which provoked the first one. The situation is more obscure in the case of other phenomena.

Our experiences have shown us, however, that the most various symptoms, which are ostensibly spontaneous and, as one might say, idiopathic products of hysteria, are just as strictly related to the precipitating trauma as the phenomena to which we have just alluded and which exhibit the connection quite clearly.[28]

This paper was reprinted and supplemented with case studies in the pair's 1895 book Studien über Hysterie (Studies on Hysteria). Of the book's five case studies, the most famous became that of Breuer's patient Bertha Pappenheim (given the pseudonym "Anna O."). This book established the field of psychoanalysis.

French neurologist Paul Oulmont was mentored by Charcot. In his 1894 book Thérapeutique des névroses (Therapy of neuroses), he lists the neuroses as being hysteria, neurasthenia, exophthalmic goitre, epilepsy, migraine, Sydenham's chorea, Parkinson's disease and tetany.[29]

The fifth edition of German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin's popular psychiatry textbook in 1896 gave "neuroses" a well-accepted definition:[2]

In the following presentation we want to summarize a group of disease states as general neuroses, which are accompanied by more or less pronounced nervous dysfunctions. What is common to these manifestations of insanity is that we are constantly dealing with the morbid processing of vital stimuli; what they also have in common is the occurrence of more transitory, peculiar manifestations of illness, sometimes in the physical, sometimes in the psychic area. These attacks of fluctuations in mental balance are therefore not independent illnesses, but only the occasional increase in a persistent illness... It seems useful to me, for the time being, to distinguish between two main forms of general neuroses, epileptic and hysterical insanity.[30]

Pierre Janet published the two volume work Névroses et Idées Fixes (Neuroses and Fixations) in 1898.[31][32] According to Janet, neuroses could be usefully divided into hysterias and psychasthenias. Hysterias induced such symptoms as anaesthesia, visual field narrowing, paralyses, and unconscious acts.[33] Psychasthenias involved the ability to adjust to one's surroundings, similar to the later concepts of adjustment disorder and executive functions.

Janet founded the French "Société de psychologie"[34] in 1901. This later became the "Société française de psychologie", and continues today as France's main psychology body.[35]

Barbiturate is a class of highly addictive sedative drugs. The first barbiturate, barbital, was synthesized in 1902 by German chemists Emil Fischer and Joseph von Mering and was first marketed as "Veronal" in 1904.[36] Later on, the similar barbiturate phenobarbital was brought to market in 1912 under the name "Luminal". After that, Barbiturate became a popular drug in many countries to reduce neurotic anxiety and displaced the use of bromides.

Janet published the book Les Obsessions et la Psychasthénie (The Obsessions and the Psychasthenias) in 1903.[31] Janet followed this with the books The Major Symptoms of Hysteria in 1907,[37] and Les Névroses (The Neuroses) in 1909.[31]

Janet also co-founded the Journal de psychologie normale et pathologique (Journal of Normal and Pathological Psychology) in 1903.[35]

According to Janet, one cause of neurosis is when the mental force of a traumatic event is stronger than what someone can counter using their normal coping mechanisms.[38]

Meanwhile, Freud developed a number of different theories of neurosis. The most impactful one was that it referred to mental disorders caused by the brain's defence against past psychological trauma.[39] This redefined the general understanding and use of the word. It came to replace the concept of "hysteria".

He held the First Congress for Freudian Psychology in Salzburg in April 1908. Subsequent Congresses continue today.

Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) was first developed by American psychiatrist and physiologist Edmund Jacobson.[40] This began at Harvard University in 1908.[40] PMR involves learning to relieve the tension in specific muscle groups by first tensing and then relaxing each muscle group.[41] When the muscle tension is released, attention is directed towards the differences felt during tension and relaxation so that the patient learns to recognize the contrast between the states.[42][43] This reduces anxiety and the effect of phobias.[44]

Freud published the detailed case study "Bemerkungen über einen Fall von Zwangsneurose" (Notes Upon a Case of Obsessional Neurosis) in 1909, documenting his treatment of "Rat Man".

Freud established the International Psychoanalytical Association (IPA) in March 1910. He arranged for Carl Jung to be its first president. This organisation chose to only provide both psychoanalytic training and recognition to medical doctors.

The American Psychoanalytic Association was founded in 1911[45] by Welsh neurologist Ernest Jones, with the support of Freud. It followed the IPA's practice of only supporting psychoanalysis provided by medical doctors.

Jung gave a speech explaining his understanding of Freud's work called Psychoanalysis and Neurosis in New York in 1912. It was published in 1916.[46]

The journal Internationale Zeitschrift für Psychoanalyse was established in 1913, and continued until 1941.

The battlefield stresses of World War I (1914–18) lead to many cases of strong short-term psychological symptoms, known today as "combat stress reaction" (CSR). Other terms for the condition include "combat fatigue", "battle fatigue", "battle neurosis", "shell shock" and "operational stress reaction". The general psychological term acute stress disorder was first used for this condition at this time.[citation needed]

The fight-or-flight response was first described by American physiologist Walter Bradford Cannon in 1915.[47]

American military psychiatrist Thomas W. Salmon (the chief consultant in psychiatry in the American Expeditionary Force)[48] released the book The care and treatment of mental diseases and war neuroses ("shell shock") in the British army in 1917,[49] dealing primarily with what was considered was the best treatment for hysteria. His recommendations were broadly adopted in the US armed forces.

Freud's most explanatory work on neurosis was his lectures later grouped together as "General Theory of the Neuroses" (1916–17), forming part 3 of the book Vorlesungen zur Einführung in die Psychoanalyse (1917), later published in English as A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis (1920).[50]

In that work, Freud noted that:

The meaning of neurotic symptoms was first discovered by J. Breuer in the study and felicitous cure of a case of hysteria which has since become famous (1880–82). It is true that P. Janet independently reached the same result...

The [neurotic] symptom develops as a substitution for something else that has remained suppressed. Certain psychological experiences should normally have become so far elaborated that consciousness would have attained knowledge of them. This did not take place, however, but out of these interrupted and disturbed processes, imprisoned in the unconscious, the symptom arose...

Our therapy does its work by means of changing the unconscious into the conscious, and is effective only in so far as it has the opportunity of bringing about this transformation...[50]

Freud added to this with his paper "Aus der Geschichte einer infantilen Neurose" (From the History of an Infantile Neurosis) published in 1918, which is a detailed case study of Freud's treatment of the "Wolfman".

The International Journal of Psychoanalysis was founded by Ernest Jones in 1920.

In response to stress injuries from World War I, the British government produced the Report of the War Office Committee of Inquiry into "Shell-Shock", which was published in 1922.

Its recommended course of treatment included:

While recognizing that each individual case of war neurosis must be treated on its merits, the Committee are of opinion that good results will be obtained in the majority by the simplest forms of psycho-therapy, i.e., explanation, persuasion and suggestion, aided by such physical methods as baths, electricity and massage. Rest of mind and body is essential in all cases.

The committee are of opinion that the production of deep hypnotic sleep, while beneficial as a means of conveying suggestions or eliciting forgotten experiences are useful in selected cases, but in the majority they are unnecessary and may even aggravate the symptoms for a time.

They do not recommend psycho-analysis in the Freudian sense.

In the state of convalescence, re-education and suitable occupation of an interesting nature are of great importance. If the patient is unfit for further military service, it is considered that every endeavor should be made to obtain for him suitable employment on his return to active life.

The common neuroses and their treatment by psychotherapy was a book released by British psychiatrist Thomas Arthur Ross[51] in 1923, to instruct medical doctors in general.[52] (A second edition was published in 1937, which was subsequently reprinted many times). He believed that most neuroses can successfully treated by general practitioners, without the need to use "Freudian analysis". He thought that method was only necessary for the most difficult cases. Ross would later write the books Introduction to analytical psychotherapy (1932) and An enquiry into prognosis in the neuroses (1936).

In April 1923 Freud published his monograph Das Ich und das Es (published in English as The Ego and the Id),[53] which included a revised theory of mental functioning, now considering that repression was only one of many defence mechanisms, and that it occurred to reduce anxiety. Hence, Freud characterised repression as both a cause and a result of anxiety.[citation needed]

Austrian literary theorist Otto Rank was a close ally of Freud. His book The Trauma of Birth (1924) focused more on people's choices, rather than Freud's focus on drives. He believed in the idea of psychotherapy as opposed to psychoanalysis - that understanding someone's neuroses wasn't sufficient for effective therapy.[citation needed]

Freud released his book Hemmung, Symptom und Angst (Inhibition, Symptom and Anxiety) in 1926, in reaction to Rank's book.[54] It detailed his further developed understanding of neurosis and anxiety. (The book was published in English as The Problem of Anxiety in 1936.) This book expressed his new view that anxiety created repression, rather than the other way around.[55]

Freud also published the book Die Frage der Laienanalyse (The Question of Lay Analysis) in 1926, in which he endorsed non-doctors performing psychoanalysis.

In 1929, Austrian psychiatrist Alfred Adler published the book Problems of Neurosis: A Book of Case-Histories, furthering the school of individual psychology he had established in 1912.

1929 also saw Edmund Jacobson publishing of the professional instruction book Progressive Relaxation.[56] It explained the benefits of relaxation for addressing neuroses and other mental conditions.[57] He followed this with the more publicly-oriented You Must Relax[58] in 1934.

Walter Bradford Cannon's 1932 book The Wisdom of the Body[59] popularised the concept of fight-or-flight.

The American Medical Association released its Standard Classified Nomenclature of Diseases in 1933, the first widely accepted such nomenclature in the United States. By the second edition of 1935, its category of "psychoneuroses" included:

 
Hans Seyle devised the general adaptation syndrome to describe stress.

The general adaptation syndrome (GAS) theory of stress was developed by Austro-Hungarian physiologist Hans Selye in 1936.[61]

In 1937, Austrian-American psychiatrist Adolph Stern proposed that there were many people with conditions that fitted between the definitions of psychoneurosis and psychosis, and called them the "border line group of neuroses".[62] This group would later become known as borderline personality disorder.

By 1937, the concept of "occupational neuroses" was known by many American health practitioners. It referred to neuroses caused by any aspect of someone's employment.[63]

1939-1952 edit

Followers of Freud's psychoanalytic thinking, such as Carl Jung, Karen Horney, and Jacques Lacan, continued to discuss the concept of neurosis after Freud's death in 1939. The term continues to be used in the Freudian sense in psychology and philosophy.[64][65]

By 1939, some 120,000 British ex-servicemen had received final awards for primary psychiatric disability or were still drawing pensions – about 15% of all pensioned disabilities – and another 44,000 or so were getting pensions for "soldier's heart" or effort syndrome. British historian Ben Shephard notes, "There is, though, much that statistics do not show, because in terms of psychiatric effects, pensioners were just the tip of a huge iceberg."[66]

Approximately 20% of U.S. troops displayed symptoms of combat stress reaction during WWII (1939-1945). It was assumed to be a temporary response of healthy individuals to witnessing or experiencing traumatic events. Symptoms included depression, anxiety, withdrawal, confusion, paranoia, and sympathetic hyperactivity.[67] Thomas W. Salmon's battle neurosis principles were adopted by the U.S. forces during this conflict.[68]

The American Journal of Psychoanalysis was founded by Karen Horney in 1941.[69]

1942 saw American psychologist Carl Rogers publish the handbook Counseling and Psychotherapy, which established his school of person-centered therapy.

Austrian psychiatrist Otto Fenichel's encyclopaedic textbook The psychoanalytic theory of neurosis (1945) set the post-war Freudian orthodoxy on the subject. It has been heavily cited by academic papers in the years since.

 
Karen Horney developed the psychoanalytic understanding of neurosis through a series of books and by establishing a journal.

Karen Horney's Our Inner Conflicts: A Constructive Theory of Neurosis (1945) was a popular book on the topic.

The post-World War II boom in the number of patient-treating psychologists in the United States led to a major restructure of the American Psychological Association in 1945. Carol Rogers became its president in 1947.[70]

Austrian psychiatrist Viktor Frankl's best selling book Man's Search for Meaning (1946) launched the psychotherapy school of logotherapy.

For his 1947 book, Dimensions of Personality, German-British psychologist Hans Eysenck created the term "neuroticism" to refer to someone whose "constitution may leave them liable to break down [emotionally] with the slightest provocation".[71] The book outlines a two-factor theory of personality, with neuroticism as one of those two factors. This book would be greatly influential on future personality theory.

Karen Horney's Neurosis and Human Growth (1950) further expanded the understanding of neuroses.

French-Swiss psychologist Germaine Guex's 1950 book La névrose d'abandon proposed the existence of the condition of "abandonment neurosis". It also detailed all the forms of treatment Geux had found effective in treating it. (It was published in English as The Abandonment Neurosis in 2015).[72]

In October 1951, the now highly influential Carl Rogers presented a paper in which he described the relationship between neurosis and his understanding of effective therapy. He wrote:

The emotionally maladjusted person, the "neurotic", is in difficulty first because communication within himself has broken down, and second because as a result of this his communication with others has been damaged. If this sounds somewhat strange, then let me put it in other terms. In the "neurotic" individual, parts of himself which have been termed unconscious, or repressed, or denied to awareness, become blocked off so that they no longer communicate themselves to the conscious or managing part of himself... The task of psychotherapy is to help the person achieve, through a special relationship with the therapist, good communication within himself.[73]

The North American Society of Adlerian Psychology was established in 1952,[74] becoming the predominant society of its cause in the world.

DSM-I (1952-1968) edit

The first edition of the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-I) in 1952 included a category named "Psychoneurotic Disorders".[75]

Regarding the definition of this category, the Manual stated:

Grouped as Psychoneurotic Disorders are those disturbances in which "anxiety" is a chief characteristic, directly felt and expressed, or automatically controlled by such defenses as depression, conversion, dissociation, displacement, phobia formation, or repetitive thoughts and acts. For this nomenclature, a psychoneurotic reaction may be defined as one in which the personality, in its struggle for adjustment to internal and external stresses, utilizes the mechanisms listed above to handle the anxiety created. The qualifying phrase, x.2 with neurotic reaction, may be used to amplify the diagnosis when, in the presence of another psychiatric disturbance, a symptomatic clinical picture appears which might be diagnosed under Psychoneurotic Disorders in this nomenclature. A specific example may be seen in an episode of acute anxiety occurring in a homosexual.[75]

Conditions in the category included:

The DSM-I also included a category of "transient situational personality disorders". This included the diagnosis of "gross stress reaction".[76] This was defined as a normal personality using established patterns of reaction to deal with overwhelming fear as a response to conditions of great stress.[77] The diagnosis included language which relates the condition to combat as well as to "civilian catastrophe".[77] The other situational disorders were "adult situational reaction" and a variety of time-of-life delineated "adjustment reactions". These referred to short-term reactions to stressors.

Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) and tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) were developed for the treatment of neurosis and other conditions from the early 1950s. Because of their undesirable adverse-effect profile and high potential for toxicity, their use was limited.[78][79]

The use of modern exposure therapy for neuroses began in the 1950s in South Africa.[80] South African-American Joseph Wolpe was one of the first psychiatrists to spark interest in treating psychiatric problems as behavioral issues.

In May 1950, pharmacologist Frank Berger (Czech-American) and chemist Bernard John Ludwig engineered meprobamate to be a non-drowsy tranquiliser.[81] Launched as "Miltown" in 1955, it rapidly became the first blockbuster psychotropic drug in American history, becoming popular in Hollywood and gaining fame for its effects.[82] It is highly addictive.

The Meaning of Anxiety was a book released by American psychiatrist Rollo May in 1950.[83] It reviewed the existing research on the subject. It found that some anxiety was a simple reaction to related stimuli, while other anxiety had a more complicated and neurotic beginning. A revised edition of the book was published in 1977.

After the Korean War (1950-1953), Thomas W. Salmon's battle neurosis treatment practices became summarised as the PIE principles:[84]

  • Proximity – treat the casualties close to the front and within sound of the fighting.
  • Immediacy – treat them without delay and not wait until the wounded were all dealt with.
  • Expectancy – ensure that everyone had the expectation of their return to the front after a rest and replenishment.

The Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale was created by American psychologist Janet Taylor in 1953. It measures anxiousness as a personality trait.

The International Association of Analytical Psychology was founded in 1955. It is the predominant organisation devoted to the psychology of Carl Jung.

The American Academy of Psychoanalysis was founded in 1956, for psychiatrists to discuss psychoanalysis in ways that deviated from the orthodoxy of the time.

Also in 1956, American psychologist Albert Ellis published his first paper on his methodology "rational psychotherapy". This and later works defined what is now known as rational emotive behavior therapy (REBT). Ellis believed that people's erroneous beliefs about their adversities was a major cause of neurosis, and his therapy aimed to dissolve these neuroses by correcting people's understandings. Ellis published the first REBT book, How to live with a neurotic, in 1957. Ellis' therapy was also the beginning of what is now called cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT).

Albert Ellis and others founded "The Institute for Rational Living" in April 1959, which later became the Albert Ellis Institute.[85]

The concept of "institutional neurosis" was coined by British psychiatrist Russell Barton,[86] and explained in his well-cited 1959 book Institutional Neurosis.[87] Barton believed that many of the mental health symptoms had by people living in mental hospitals and similar institutions were caused by being in those environments, rather than other causes. Barton was a leader in the deinstitutionalisation movement. (This form of neurosis later came to be known as "institutional syndrome").

Benzodiazepine is a class of highly addictive sedative drugs that reduce anxiety by depressing function in certain parts of the brain. The first of these drugs, chlordiazepoxide (Librium), was made available for sale in 1960. (It was discovered by Polish-American chemist Leo Sternbach in 1955.) Librium was followed with the more popular diazepam (Valium) in 1963.[88] These drugs soon displaced Miltown.[89][90]

Spanish history writer Jose M. Lopez Pinero published Origenes historicos del concepto de neurosis in 1963.[91] It was published in English as Historical Origins of the Concept of Neurosis in 1983.[92]

Neurotics Anonymous began in February 1964, as a twelve-step program to help the neurotic. It was founded in Washington, D.C. by American psychologist Grover Boydston,[93][94] and has since spread through the Americas.

Also in 1964, Polish psychiatrist Kazimierz Dąbrowski released his book Positive Disintegration.[95] The book argues that developing and resolving psychoneurosis is a necessary part of healthy personality development.

The year 1964 also saw the establishment of the American Psychological Association's Division 25, a group of psychologists interested in behaviourism.[96]

The popular textbook The causes and cures of neurosis; an introduction to modern behaviour therapy based on learning theory and the principles of conditioning was published in 1965 by Hans Eysenck and South African-British psychologist Stanley Rachman.[97] It aimed to replace the Freudian approach to neurosis with behaviorism.

The "Hopkins Symptom Checklist" (HSCL) is a self-report symptom inventory that was developed in the mid-1960s from earlier checklists. It measures somatization, obsession-compulsion, interpersonal sensitivity, anxiety and depression.[98]

In 1966, psychologists began to observe large numbers of children of Holocaust survivors seeking mental help in clinics in Canada. The grandchildren of Holocaust survivors were overrepresented by 300% among the referrals to psychiatry clinics in comparison with their representation in the general population.[99] Further study lead to the better understanding of transgenerational trauma.

The noted book Psychological stress and the coping process was released by American psychologist Richard Lazarus in 1966.

The well-cited book Anxiety and Behaviour was also released in 1966. As with Eysenck and Rachman's book, it aimed to connect neuroses with behaviourism. It was edited by American psychologist Charles Spielberger.

The Association for Advancement of Behavioral Therapies was founded in 1966. (In 2005, it became the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies.)

DSM-II (1968-1980) edit

After Freudian thinking became less prominent in psychology, the term "neurosis" came to be used as a near synonym for "anxiety". The second edition of the DSM (DSM-II) in 1968 described neuroses thusly:

Anxiety is the chief characteristic of the neuroses. It may be felt and expressed directly, or it may be controlled unconsciously and automatically by conversion [into physical symptoms], displacement [into mental symptoms] and various other psychological mechanisms. Generally, these mechanisms produce symptoms experienced as subjective distress from which the patient desires relief. The neuroses, as contrasted to the psychoses, manifest neither gross distortion or misinterpretation of external reality, nor gross personality disorganization...

Included in this category were the conditions:

What was previously "gross stress reaction" and "adult situational reaction" was combined into the new "adjustment disorder of adult life", a condition covering mild to strong reactions.[100] Other adjustment disorders for other times-of-life were also included. (Also, the category "transient situational personality disorders" was renamed "transient situational disturbances.")

Anxiety and Neurosis was a popular mass-market book released in 1968 by British psychologist Charles Rycroft.[101]

Neuroses and Personality Disorders was a popular textbook released by American psychologist Elton B McNeil[102] in 1970.[103]

The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) was developed by Charles Spielberger and others, and first published in 1970. It provides separate "state" and "trait" measures of a person's anxiety. A revised form was released in 1983.[104]

The book Primal Scream. Primal Therapy: The Cure for Neurosis by American psychologist Arthur Janov was released in 1970. It established primal therapy as a treatment for neurosis. It is based on the idea that neurosis is caused by the repressed pain of childhood trauma. Janov argued that repressed pain can be sequentially brought to conscious awareness for resolution through re-experiencing specific incidents and fully expressing the resulting pain during therapy. Janov criticizes the talking therapies as they deal primarily with the cerebral cortex and higher-reasoning areas and do not access the source of Pain within the more basic parts of the central nervous system.[105] (A second edition of the book was published in 1999).

Chinese-American psychiatrist William WK Zung[106] released his "Anxiety Status Inventory" (ASI) and patient "Self-rating Anxiety Scale" (SAS) in November 1971.[107]

Dąbrowski expanded on his earlier book with Psychoneurosis Is Not An Illness: Neuroses And Psychoneuroses From The Perspective Of Positive Disintegration in 1972.

Anxiety: Current Trends in Theory and Research is a well-cited series of two books released in 1972, and were edited by Charles Spielberger.

American anthropologist Ernst Becker in his Pulitzer-winning book The Denial of Death (1973) argued that the repression of the fear of death had a number of advantages, and that this was a major source of neurosis.

The first tetracyclic anti-depressant (TeCA) maprotiline (Ludiomil) was developed by Ciba,[108] and patented in 1966.[108] It was introduced for medical use in 1974.[108][109] TeCAs mianserin (Tolvon) and amoxapine (Asendin) followed shortly thereafter and mirtazapine (Remeron) being introduced later on.[108][109]

 
Aaron Beck advanced cognitive behavioral therapy, and developed a cognitive theory of depression.

Albert Ellis' work was expanded on by fellow American, psychiatrist Aaron Beck. In 1975, Beck released the greatly influential book Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders. Beck's cognitive therapy became popular, soon becoming the most popular form of CBT and often being known by that name.

American psychologist Martin Seligman released his highly cited book Helplessness: On Depression, Development and Death in 1975.

Also in 1975, Americans the nurse Ann Burgess and sociologist Lynda Lytle Holmstrom[110] defined rape trauma syndrome in order to draw attention to the striking similarities between the experiences of soldiers returning from war and of rape victims.[111]

Beta-blockers are a class of medication that block the receptor sites for epinephrine (adrenaline) and norepinephrine (noradrenaline) on beta receptors, of the sympathetic nervous system, which mediates the fight-or-flight response.[112][113] By the mid-1970s, beta blockers were used to reduce symptoms of anxiety. (Scottish pharmacologist James Black had synthesized the first clinically significant beta blockers (propranolol and pronethalol) in 1964).[114]

In 1977, benzodiazepines had become the most prescribed medications globally.[115][116] That was the year the highly addictive benzodiazepine lorazepam (Ativan) entered the US market, (having earlier been invented by American chemist Stanley C Bell in 1963.)[117][118][119]

American psychiatrist and historian Kenneth Levin's Freud's early psychology of the neuroses: a historical perspective was published in 1978.

The well-cited book Cognitive therapy of depression was written by Aaron Beck, American psychiatrist A. John Rush, Canadian psychologist Brian F. Shaw[120] and American psychologist Gary Emery.[121] It was released in 1979. It launched the Beck's cognitive triad explanation of depression, and lead to CBT becoming the main talking-therapy used to treat depression.

In 1979, American biologist Jon Kabat-Zinn founded the Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) program at the University of Massachusetts to treat the chronically ill.[web 1] This program sparked the application of mindfulness ideas and practices in western medicine.[122]

American-Israeli medical sociologist Aaron Antonovsky in his 1979 book Stress, Health and Coping, stated that an event will not be perceived as stressful when it is appraised as consistent, under some personal control of the outcome, and balanced between underload and overload. Someone resistant to stress will see potential stressors as instead being "meaningful, predictable, and ordered."[123] Antonovsky proposed that stress and a lack of an individual's "resistance resources" (to stressors) may be the main underlying causes of illness and disease, not just mental neuroses. This book established the field of salutogenesis.

In January 1980, Stanley Rachman published a well-cited working definition of "emotional processing",[124] aiming to define the "certain psychological experiences" Freud had mentioned in his 1923 book (and had earlier referred to). It included lists of things likely to improve or retard such processing.

DSM-III (1980-1994) edit

The DSM replaced its "neurosis" category with an "anxiety disorders" category in 1980, with the release of the DSM-III. It did this because of a decision by its editors to provide descriptions of behavior rather than descriptions of hidden psychological mechanisms.[125] This change was controversial.[126]

This edition of the book also included a condition named "post-traumatic stress disorder" for the first time.[127] This was similar in definition to the "gross stress reaction" of the DSM-I.

The anxiety disorders were defined as:

Adjustment disorder remained, and was defined separately. Its time-of-life based subtypes were abolished, replaced with combinations with co-morbid syndromes (such as "Adjustment Disorder with Depressed Mood" and "Adjustment Disorder with Anxious Mood").[127] Adjustment disorder returned to being a short-term condition.

Somatoform disorders, disassociation, depression and hypochondria (all previously considered neuroses) were also treated separately. Neurasthenia (a neurosis that caused otherwise unexplainable fatigue) was loosely mapped to a mild form of depression.

The American "National Membership Committee on Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work" was established in May 1980.[128] (It became the "American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work" in 2007).[128]

The Phobia Society of America was founded by psychologist Jerilyn Ross and others in December 1980.[126]

In 1981, American psychologists Christina Maslach and Susan E. Jackson published an instrument for assessing occupational burnout, the Maslach Burnout Inventory.[129] The two researchers described burnout in terms of emotional exhaustion, depersonalization (feeling low empathy towards other people in an occupational setting), and reduced feelings of work-related personal accomplishment.[130][131]

The highly addictive benzodiazepine alprazolam (Xanax) was approved for medical use in the United States in 1981,[132][133] (having been invented by American chemist Jackson Hester in 1971.)[134] This and accounts of Valium addiction issues (particularly that of Barbara Gordon) led to the latter no longer being the most prescribed drug in the United States in 1982.[89]

Acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) was started by American psychologist Steven C. Hayes in around 1982.[135] The core conception of ACT is that psychological suffering is usually caused by experiential avoidance, cognitive entanglement, and resulting psychological rigidity that leads to a failure to take needed behavioral steps in accord with core values. ACT teaches people to "just notice" their unhelpful thoughts and feelings rather than reifying them (mindfulness), to discover their values, and then commit to actions in line with those values.

By 1982, the US military had moved from using the PIE principles to treat wartime stress reactions, and was using the similar "BICEP" instead. This stands for Brevity, Immediacy, Centrality (Marines) or Contact (Army), Expectancy and Proximity. "Brevity" was the aim to treat combatants for only 1 to 4 days. "Centrality" refers to the centralised location of treatment. "Contact" meant a continued contact with their unit and chain of command, "The Soldier must be encouraged to continue to think of himself as a warfighter, rather than a patient or a sick person."[136]

The concept of motivational interviewing was first published about in April 1983 by its originator, the American psychologist William Richard Miller.[137] It is a form of talking treatment that focuses on motivating the patient to do what they believe they need to do.

The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale was released in June 1983,[138] in a well-cited paper by British psychiatrists Anthony S Zigmond and R Phillip Snaith.[139] The Perceived Stress Scale originates from December 1983,[140] when it was detailed in a paper by American psychologists Sheldon Cohen, Tom Kamarck,[141] and Robin Mermelstein.[142]

American psychiatrist George F. Drinka released the history book Birth of Neurosis: Myth, Malady, and the Victorians in 1984.[143]

In the 1984 book Stress, Appraisal and Coping, American psychologists Richard Lazarus and Susan Folkman suggested that stress can be thought of as resulting from an "imbalance between demands and resources" or as occurring when "pressure exceeds one's perceived ability to cope".[144] They developed the transactional model of stress. The book is the 17th most cited book in social science.[145][146]

The Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (STSS) was founded in the United States in March 1985 for professionals to share information about the effects of trauma. It later became the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ISTSS).

Stress inoculation training was developed to reduce anxiety in doctors during times of intense stress by American doctor Donald Meichenbaum in 1985.[147]

1985 also saw the publishing of the well-cited Anxiety Disorders and Phobias: A Cognitive Perspective by Aaron Beck and others. It described how CBT could be used to successfully treat conditions that weren't depression.

 
Edna Foa co-developed prolonged exposure therapy.

In 1986, "emotional processing theory" was first presented by psychologists Edna Foa (Israeli-American) and Michael J Kozak[39] (American).[148][65][64] This led to their development of prolonged exposure therapy for PTSD. It is characterized by two main treatment procedures. "Imaginal exposure" is repeated purposeful retelling of the trauma memory. "In vivo exposure" is gradually confronting situations, places, and things that are reminders of the trauma or feel dangerous (despite being objectively safe).

The first selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) medication went on the market in Belgium in 1986. They became available in the United States in 1988, and in other places around this time. This class of drugs largely replaced MOAIs and TCAs, as they were much safer. In the United States, these drugs are most commonly known as Prozac, Zoloft, Paxil, Luvox, Celexa and Lexapro. (The first SSRI was developed by chemists including the Scottish-American Bryan Molloy and Chinese-American David T Wong.) The SSRIs were soon supplemented with the similar SNRI class, which includes Effexor. Antidepressant discontinuation syndrome is a significant issue with the use of both classes.

Azapirones are a group of drugs that work at the 5‐HT1A serotonin receptor, and are used to reduce anxiety. The first available azapirone buspirone (Buspar), was approved in the United States in 1986. (It was invented by a team at Mead Johnson in the US in 1968). The only other drug in this class that is widely used in tandospirone (Sediel), which is available in some Asian countries.

Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) is a form of exposure therapy devised by American psychologist Francine Shapiro from 1987, with the first papers on it published in 1989.[149] It involves focusing on traumatic memories while engaging in side-to-side eye movements or other similar distractions. (The technique became more broadly known after the release of Shapiro's book Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing: Basic Principles, Protocols, and Procedures in 2001.)

In well-cited paper "Psychosocial resilience and protective mechanisms", British psychiatrist Michael Rutter in July 1987 found that resilience could be improved in an individual by the 1) reduction of risk impact, 2) reduction of negative chain reactions, 3) establishment and maintenance of self-esteem and self-efficacy, and 4) opening up of opportunities.[150]

Cognitive processing therapy (CPT) was developed by American psychologist Patricia Resick from 1988. The primary focus of the treatment is to help the client understand and reconceptualize their traumatic event in a way that reduces its ongoing negative effects on their current life. Decreasing avoidance of the trauma is crucial to this, since it is necessary for the client to examine and evaluate their meta-emotions and beliefs generated by the trauma.[citation needed]

In 1988, the First European Conference on Traumatic Stress Studies was held in Lincoln, with the participation of the STSS. The European Trauma Network was formed at this time. This became the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS) in 1993.[151]

The highly cited book Anxiety and its Disorders is a wide-ranging review of the subject released by American psychologist David H. Barlow in 1988. A second edition was published in 2002.

The "Penn State Worry Questionnaire" was developed in 1988 by American psychologists Thomas D Borkovec and Andrew M Mathews.[152] A subsequent validation of it has been highly cited.[152]

The Beck Anxiety Inventory was first released in December 1988, by Aaron Beck and others.[153][154]

The conservation of resources (COR) theory of stress was proposed by American psychologist Stevan Hobfoll[155] in March 1989. It is a heavily cited theory that describes the motivation that drives humans to both maintain their current resources and to pursue new resources.[156]

The well cited-paper "Childhood trauma in borderline personality disorder" was released in April 1989, positing "a strong association between a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder and a history of abuse in childhood."[157] It was authored by psychiatrists Judith Lewis Herman (American), John Christopher Perry (Canadian) and Bessel van der Kolk (Dutch-American).

The world's main psychoanalysis bodies decided to admit people who were not medical doctors in 1989, after a major lawsuit was made against them.[158]

In 1990, the Phobia Society of America became the Anxiety Disorders Association of America.[159]

The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook was first released in August 1990. It has since sold over a million copies, and had seven editions. It was written by American philosopher and behavioural scientist Edmund J. Bourne.[160]

The International Karen Horney Society was founded in 1991.[161]

The highly-cited August 1991 book Motivational Interviewing by William Richard Miller and South African-British psychologist Stephen Rollnick greatly developed and promoted its subject. Further editions were released in 2002 and 2012.

After decades of development, the American psychologist Marsha M. Linehan published a defining paper for a new treatment for borderline personality disorder, called dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) in December 1991.[162] This has come to be used to treat emotional dysregulation more broadly.

The World Association of Psychoanalysis was founded in January 1992, and became the largest organisation devoted to the psychotherapy of Jacques Lacan.

The first World Conference on Traumatic Stress was held in Amsterdam in June 1992, organised by the ISTSS.[151]

The well-cited book Anxiety: A cognitive perspective was released by British psychologist Michael Eysenck in 1992.

Judith Lewis Herman's 1992 book Trauma and Recovery proposed that there is an important difference between single-incident traumas (Type I traumas), and complex or repeated traumas (Type II).[163] (The sustained negative effect of the latter was later recognised as complex post-traumatic stress disorder (CPTSD) by the ICD-11.) A second edition of the book was published in 1997.

The well-cited paper "Lifetime and 12-Month Prevalence of DSM-III-R Psychiatric Disorders in the United States: Results From the National Comorbidity Survey" was released by American sociologist Ronald C. Kessler and seven others in January 1994.[164]

DSM-IV (1994-2013) edit

The conditions acute stress reaction and acute stress disorder were added to the DSM-IV (1994), describing what had previously been considered some types of adjustment disorder. "Acute stress reaction" referred to the symptoms experienced immediately to 48 hours after exposure to a traumatic event. "Acute stress disorder" was defined by symptoms experienced 48 hours to one month following the event. Symptoms experienced for longer than one month were considered to be PTSD.[67]

The "anxiety disorders" were:

"Adjustment disorder" remained in the DSM, and was largely unchanged.

The Anxiety Disorders Association of Victoria was established in Melbourne in 1994.[165]

Trauma-focused cognitive-behavioral therapy (TF-CBT) was developed by American psychiatrists Anthony Mannarino,[166] Judith Cohen,[167] and Esther Deblinger[168] in the mid-1990s to help children and adolescents with PTSD. There are 3 treatment phases: stabilization, trauma narration and processing, and integration and consolidation.

The "Depression Anxiety Stress Scales"[169] (DASS) were developed by Australian father-and-son psychologists Syd H Lovibond[170] and Peter F Lovibond,[171] and first made public in 1995.[172] The scales are a self-report instrument designed to measure depression, anxiety and stress; and have become one of the most widely used for these purposes. Both the 42 and 21 question versions were the subject of a highly cited review in 1998.[173] They have been found to correlate highly with Beck's depression and anxiety scales.

Australia's "National Centre for War-Related PTSD" was founded in 1995. In 2000 it broadened its focus to include all post-traumatic mental health, and become "Phoenix Australia – Centre for Posttraumatic Mental Health" in 2015.[174]

"Posttraumatic stress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey" is a highly cited paper published in December 1995 by Ronald C. Kessler and others.[175]

The popular book Traumatic Stress: The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind, Body, and Society was edited by Bessel van der Kolk, Australian psychiatrist Alexander C. McFarlane[176] and Norwegian psychiatrist Lars Weisaeth. It was released in 1996.

The dual representation theory (DRT) of PTSD was developed by British psychologists Chris Brewin,[177] Tim Dalgleish,[178] and Stephen Joseph[179] in July 1996.[180] It proposes that certain symptoms of PTSD - such as nightmares, flashbacks, and emotional disturbance - may be attributed to memory processes that occur after exposure to a traumatic event. DRT proposes the existence of two separate memory systems that run in parallel during memory formation: the verbally accessible memory system (VAM) and situationally accessible memory system (SAM).[181]

The World Association for Person Centered & Experiential Psychotherapy & Counseling (WAPCEPC) was established in July 1996,[182] furthering the work of Carl Rogers.

The Deutschsprachige Gesellschaft für Psychotraumatologie[183] (German-speaking Society for Psychotraumatology) was established in 1998. It was co-founded by German psychologist Andreas Maercker.

"Trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder in the community: the 1996 Detroit Area Survey of Trauma" was a highly cited paper published in July 1998 by Israeli-American sociologist Naomi Breslau, Ronald C. Kessler and others.[184]

Self-Efficacy: The Exercise of Control is an extremely well-cited book published by Canadian-American psychologist Albert Bandura in February 1997. It describes the power of a person's belief in their ability to achieve their goals (dubbed "self-efficacy"), and the effect of this on anxiety, phobias, depression and other things.

Edna Foa and EA Meadows published the well-cited paper "Psychosocial Treatments for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder: A Critical Review" in February 1997.[185] It examined CBT, EMDR and stress inoculation training; and treatment programs that combined these.

Foa's "Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale" was first published in December 1997 in a well-cited paper.[186]

"The development of anxiety: The role of control in the early environment."[187] is a well-cited paper from July 1998, by American psychologists Bruce Chorpita and David H Barlow. It posited that people who feel a lack of control of their lives as a child, are often anxious as adults.

Bestselling book Change Your Brain, Change Your Life: The Breakthrough Program for Conquering Anxiety, Depression, Obsessiveness, Anger, and Impulsiveness was released by American psychiatrist Daniel G. Amen in December 1998.

The well-cited book Acceptance and Commitment Therapy: An Experimental Approach to Behaviour Change was published by American psychologists Steven C. Hayes, Kirk Stroshal[188] and Kelly G. Wilson[189] in 1999. This greatly publicised ACT. A second edition of the book was published in 2016.

Anxiety Canada was established in 1999.[190]

In April 2000, the paper "A cognitive model of posttraumatic stress disorder" was published by psychologists Anke Ehlers (German-British) and David M. Clark (British).[191] They and others followed this with a publishing of a treatment method based on this model in 2005.[192] The three components of this are to: modify negative appraisals of the trauma; reduce re-experiencing symptoms by discussing trauma memories and learning how to differentiate between types of trauma triggers; and reduce behaviors and thoughts that contribute to the maintenance of the "sense of current threat".

The highly cited paper "Posttraumatic stress disorder: the burden to the individual and to society" was published by Ronald C. Kessler in May 2000.[193]

The job demands-resources model (JD-R model) of stress was first described in June 2001 by psychologists Evangelia Demerouti[194] (Greek), Arnold Bakker (Dutch) and others. It suggests strain is a response to imbalance between demands on the individual and the resources they have to deal with those demands.[195][196]

The 9-question Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) is a diagnostic tool introduced in 2001 to screen adult patients in a primary care setting for the presence and severity of depression.[197][198][199] The PHQ-9 takes less than 3 minutes to complete and simply scores each of the 9 DSM-IV criteria for depression based on the mood module from the original PRIME-MD.[200] Primary care providers frequently use the PHQ-9 to screen for depression in patients.

The well-cited paper "Fears, phobias and preparedness: Toward an evolved module of fear and fear learning"[201] was published in July 2001. It was authored by psychologists Arne Öhman (Swedish) and Susan Mineka[202] (American). It argued that fears are developed by the amygdala and related neural circuitry in an unconscious way, and "is relatively impenetrable to cognitive control." The triggers for such fears are "stimuli that are fear relevant in an evolutionary perspective."

The paper "Traumatic events and post-traumatic stress disorder in the community: prevalence, risk factors and comorbidity" was published by German psychologist Axel Perkonigg,[203] Ronald C. Kessler, S. Storz and German psychologist Hans-Ulrich Wittchen in December 2001.[204]

Another highly cited paper, titled "Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder," was published by American psychiatrist Rachel Yehuda in January 2002.[205]

The PTSD Workbook: Simple, Effective Techniques for Overcoming Traumatic Stress Symptoms[206] by American social worker Mary Beth Williams[207] and Finnish psychologist Soili Poijula[208] in March 2002. New editions were released in 2013 and 2016. It has been widely used.

"Predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder and symptoms in adults: A meta-analysis."[209] is a well-cited paper published in January 2003 by American psychologists Emily J Ozer,[210] Susan R Best, Tami L Lipsey, and Daniel S Weiss.[211] It found that "peritraumatic psychological processes, not prior characteristics, are the strongest predictors of PTSD."

The highly cited paper "Psychological theories of posttraumatic stress disorder" was published by British psychologists Chris Brewin[177] and Emily A Holmes in May 2003. It reviewed Foa's emotional processing theory, Brewin's dual representation theory, and Ehlers and Clark's cognitive theory; and found them to significantly overlap.[212]

The Connor‐Davidson Resilience Scale was first released by American psychiatrists Kathryn M. Connor[213] and Jonathan R.T. Davidson[214] in September 2003.[215]

The Emotional Brain: The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life is a well-cited book by American neuroscientist Joseph E. LeDoux from November 2004. It states that conditions like phobias and PTSD involve malfunctions in the way the brain's emotion systems learn and remember, and details how those systems work. He posits that trauma-initiated conditions occur because the brain's "lower" amygdala-based unconscious fear system is detached from its "higher" cortical and conscious fear system.

In 2005, the Swedish Board of Health and Welfare adopted into that country's variation of the ICD a refined conceptualisation of severe burnout it described as "exhaustion disorder."[216]

The Association for Contextual Behavioral Science was established in 2005, becoming the world's dominant ACT body.

The UK's National Institute for Health and Care Excellence released a PTSD guideline document in 2005.[217] It received a major update in December 2018.[217]

The Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 (GAD-7) is a generalised anxiety disorder measurement instrument released in May 2006, by its American authors the psychiatrists Robert L. Spitzer and Kurt Kroenke,[218] social worker Janet B. W. Williams, and others.[219] Spitzer and Williams were married.

The PTSD Association of Canada was founded in 2006.[220]

The American Psychiatric Association's Division 56, Division of Trauma Psychology,[221] was founded in 2006 to increase discussion of trauma psychology by American psychiatrists. By 2009, it had more than 1200 members.[222]

"Functional Neuroimaging of Anxiety: A Meta-Analysis of Emotional Processing in PTSD, Social Anxiety Disorder, and Specific Phobia" was a well-cited paper of October 2007. It was authored by American neuroscientists Amit Etkin[223] and Tor Wager. It found that "patients with any of the three disorders consistently showed greater activity than matched comparison subjects in the amygdala and insula..."[224]

The antidepressant and anti-anxiety medication Agomelatine was released on the European market in 2009,[225] and in Australia in 2010.[226] It was developed by Laboratoires Servier in the early 1990s.[227] It is considered primarily a melatonin receptor agonist.

"Prevalence of depression, anxiety, and adjustment disorder in oncological, haematological, and palliative-care settings: a meta-analysis of 94 interview-based studies" was a February 2011 paper that was highly cited.[228] Its lead author was British psychiatrist Alex J Mitchell.[229]

In 2012, the Anxiety Disorders Association of America became the Anxiety and Depression Association of America.

The October 2012 book Brief Interventions for Radical Change[230] established "Focused Acceptance and Commitment Therapy" (FACT), a short-duration form of ACT. The book was written by American husband-and-wife psychologists Kirk Stroshal and Patricia Robinson,[231] and Swedish psychologist Thomas Gustavsson.

Monkey Mind: A Memoir of Anxiety was a popular book released by American journalist Daniel B Smith in July 2012.

DSM-5 (2013-current) edit

In 2013, the DSM-5 was released, separating out the "trauma and stress-related disorders" (Freud's etiology for neuroses) from the "anxiety disorders". The former category includes:

The popular book My Age of Anxiety: Fear, Hope, Dread, and the Search for Peace of Mind was released in January 2014 by American journalist Scott Stossel.

In September 2014, the bestselling book The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind, and Body in the Healing of Trauma was released by Bessel van der Kolk. It explained the author's experiences of psychological trauma, and its consequent effects on mental and physical health.[232][233]

"Pharmacological interventions for somatoform disorders in adults," was a well-cited paper released in November 2014.[234] It found that there were no effective pharmaceuticals for the conditions. The lead author was German psychologist Maria Kleinstäuber.[235]

The Evil Hours: A Biography of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder was a popular book released by American writer and PTSD-sufferer David J Morris in January 2015.

Another popular book published that month was Rewire Your Anxious Brain: How to Use the Neuroscience of Fear to End Anxiety, Panic, and Worry by Americans Catherine M. Pittman[236] (psychologist) and Elizabeth M. Karle[237] (author).

American social psychologists Jeff Greenberg, Sheldon Solomon, and Tom Pyszczynski released the book The Worm at the Core: On the Role of Death in Life in March 2015. This established terror management theory, a continuation of Ernst Becker's work positing that the fear of death is a highly impactful part of human psychology.

The afflicted support charity PTSD UK was established in 2015.[238]

Declutter Your Mind: How to Stop Worrying, Relieve Anxiety, and Eliminate Negative Thinking is a popular book released in August 2016 by Americans S.J. Scott[239] (psychologist) and Barrie Davenport (coach).

The popular book First, We Make the Beast Beautiful: A New Story About Anxiety was released by Australian journalist Sarah Wilson in February 2017.

The American Psychological Association released its Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in Adults in February 2017.[240] The United States Department of Veterans Affairs released a major update of its Clinical Practice Guideline for the Management of PTSD in 2017.[241]

The role of diet in psychology gained greater attention in the first two decades of the 2000s, leading to the concept of nutritional psychiatry and the founding of the "Food and Mood Centre" at Deakin University in 2017 by Australian psychiatrist Felice Jacka.[242]

The popular book, Unfuck Your Brain: Using Science to Get Over Anxiety, Depression, Anger, Freak-Outs, and Triggers, was released by American councillor Faith G Harper[243] in October 2017.

The British Psychological Society commissioned the creation of the "Power Threat Meaning Framework"[192] by a committee over five years, with its first major release in January 2018. The framework aims to provide a complete understanding of psychological trauma, and the best way to treat it. Contrary to most psychological approaches, it includes a large focus on the patient's environment.

The Association Française Pierre Janet[244] was publicly inaugurated in March 2018.[245]

The United Kingdom Psychological Trauma Society (UKPTS) of psychological trauma treating professionals was formed in 2018 from the UK Trauma Group, and the British and Irish Chapter of ESTSS.[246]

Popular book Welcome to the United States of Anxiety: Observations from a Reforming Neurotic was released by American writer Jen Lancaster in October 2020.

Another popular book, Unwinding Anxiety: New Science Shows How to Break the Cycles of Worry and Fear to Heal Your Mind, was released by American psychiatrist Judson Brewer in March 2021.

The ICD-11 (first active in January 2022) included a substantial subset of the DSM-V conditions, and also complex post traumatic stress disorder.

Prevention edit

 
Transactional Model of Stress and Coping of Richard Lazarus and Susan Folkman.

Stress inoculation training was developed to reduce anxiety in doctors during times of intense stress by Donald Meichenbaum.[147] It is a combination of techniques including relaxation, negative thought suppression, and real-life exposure to feared situations used in PTSD treatment.[247] The therapy is divided into four phases and is based on the principles of cognitive behavioral therapy.[147] The first phase identifies the individual's specific reaction to stressors and how they manifest into symptoms. The second phase helps teach techniques to regulate these symptoms using relaxation methods. The third phase deals with specific coping strategies and positive cognitions to work through the stressors. Finally, the fourth phase exposes the client to imagined and real-life situations related to the traumatic event.[248] This training helps to shape the response to future triggers to diminish impairment in daily life.

Patients with acute stress disorder (ASD) have been found to benefit from cognitive behavioral therapy in preventing PTSD, with clinically meaningful outcomes at six-month follow-up consultations. Supportive counseling was outperformed by a regimen of relaxation, cognitive restructuring, imaginal exposure, and in-vivo exposure.[249] Programs based on mindfulness-based stress reduction also seem to be useful at managing stress.[250]

Progressive muscle relaxation (PMR) was developed by Edmund Jacobson.[40] PMR involves learning to relieve the tension in specific muscle groups by first tensing and then relaxing each muscle group.[41] When the muscle tension is released, attention is directed towards the differences felt during tension and relaxation so that the patient learns to recognize the contrast between the states.[42][43] This reduces anxiety.[44]

Playing Tetris shortly after a traumatic experience prevents the development of PTSD in some cases.[251]

Stanley Rachman compiled lists of factors that promote or impede "emotional processing" in 1980, the former reducing the development of neurosis, the latter making it more likely.[124]

Aaron Antonovsky stated that a resilient person is more likely to appraise a situation as "meaningful, predictable, and ordered."[123]

Michael Rutter found that resilience could be improved in an individual by the 1) reduction of risk impact, 2) reduction of negative chain reactions, 3) establishment and maintenance of self-esteem and self-efficacy, and 4) opening up of opportunities.[150]

The use of pharmaceuticals to mitigate the consequences of ASD has made some progress. The Alpha-1 blocker Prazosin, which controls sympathetic response, can be administered to patients to help them unwind and enable better sleep.[252] It is unclear how it functions in this situation. Following a traumatic experience, hydrocortisone (cortisol) has demonstrated some promise as an early prophylactic intervention, frequently slowing the onset of PTSD.[253]

In a systematic literature review in 2014, the Swedish Agency for Health Technology Assessment and Assessment of Social Services (SBU) found that a number of work environment factors could affect the risk of developing exhaustion disorder or depressive symptoms:

  • People who experience a work situation with little opportunity to influence, in combination with too high demands, develop more depressive symptoms.
  • People who experience a lack of compassionate support in the work environment develop more symptoms of depression and exhaustion disorder than others. Those who experience bullying or conflict in their work develop more depressive symptoms than others, but it is not possible to determine whether there is a corresponding connection for symptoms of exhaustion disorder.
  • People who feel that they have urgent work or a work situation where the reward is perceived as small in relation to the effort develops more symptoms of depression and exhaustion disorder than others. This also applies to those who experience insecurity in the employment, for example concerns that the workplace will be closed down.
  • In some work environments, people have less trouble. People who experience good opportunities for control in their own work and those who feel that they are treated fairly develop less symptoms of depression and exhaustion disorder than others.
  • Women and men with similar working conditions develop symptoms of depression as much as exhaustion disorder.[254]

Etiology edit

Historic versions of the DSM and ICD edit

The term "neurosis" is no longer used in a professional diagnostic sense, it having been eliminated from the DSM in 1980 with the publication of DSM III, and having the last remnants of being removed from the ICD with the enacting of the ICD-11 in 2022. (In the ICD-10 it was used in section F48.8 to describe certain minor conditions.)

According to the "anxiety" concept of the term, there were many different neuroses, including:

According to C. George Boeree, professor emeritus at Shippensburg University, the symptoms of neurosis may involve:[255]

... anxiety, sadness or depression, anger, irritability, mental confusion, low sense of self-worth, etc., behavioral symptoms such as phobic avoidance, vigilance, impulsive and compulsive acts, lethargy, etc., cognitive problems such as unpleasant or disturbing thoughts, repetition of thoughts and obsession, habitual fantasizing, negativity and cynicism, etc. Interpersonally, neurosis involves dependency, aggressiveness, perfectionism, schizoid isolation, socio-culturally inappropriate behaviors, etc.

Psychoanalytic (Freudian) theory edit

According to psychoanalytic theory, neuroses may be rooted in ego defense mechanisms, though the two concepts are not synonymous. Defense mechanisms are a normal way of developing and maintaining a consistent sense of self (i.e., an ego). However, only those thoughts and behaviors that produce difficulties in one's life should be called neuroses.

A neurotic person experiences emotional distress and unconscious conflict, which are manifested in various physical or mental illnesses; the definitive symptom being anxiety. Neurotic tendencies are common and may manifest themselves as acute or chronic anxiety, depression, OCD, a phobia, or a personality disorder.

Freud's typology of neuroses in "Introduction to Psychoanalysis" (1923) included:

Jungian theory edit

 
Carl Jung developed psychoanalytic theories of neurosis.

Carl Jung found his approach particularly effective for patients who are well adjusted by social standards but are troubled by existential questions. Jung claims to have "frequently seen people become neurotic when they content themselves with inadequate or wrong answers to the questions of life".[256]: 140  Accordingly, the majority of his patients "consisted not of believers but of those who had lost their faith".[256]: 140  A contemporary person, according to Jung,

... is blind to the fact that, with all his rationality and efficiency, he is possessed by 'powers' that are beyond his control. His gods and demons have not disappeared at all; they have merely got new names. They keep him on the run with restlessness, vague apprehensions, psychological complications, an insatiable need for pills, alcohol, tobacco, food — and, above all, a large array of neuroses.[257]: 82 

Jung found that the unconscious finds expression primarily through an individual's inferior psychological function, whether it is thinking, feeling, sensation, or intuition. The characteristic effects of a neurosis on the dominant and inferior functions are discussed in his Psychological Types. Jung also found collective neuroses in politics: "Our world is, so to speak, dissociated like a neurotic."[257]: 85 

Horney's theory edit

In her final book, Neurosis and Human Growth, Karen Horney lays out a complete theory of the origin and dynamics of neurosis.[258] In her theory, neurosis is a distorted way of looking at the world and at oneself, which is determined by compulsive needs rather than by a genuine interest in the world as it is. Horney proposes that neurosis is transmitted to a child from their early environment and that there are many ways in which this can occur:[258]: 18 

When summarized, they all boil down to the fact that the people in the environment are too wrapped up in their own neuroses to be able to love the child, or even to conceive of him as the particular individual he is; their attitudes toward him are determined by their own neurotic needs and responses.

The child's initial reality is then distorted by their parents' needs and pretenses. Growing up with neurotic caretakers, the child quickly becomes insecure and develops basic anxiety. To deal with this anxiety, the child's imagination creates an idealized self-image:[258]: 22 

Each person builds up his personal idealized image from the materials of his own special experiences, his earlier fantasies, his particular needs, and also his given faculties. If it were not for the personal character of the image, he would not attain a feeling of identity and unity. He idealizes, to begin with, his particular "solution" of his basic conflict: compliance becomes goodness, love, saintliness; aggressiveness becomes strength, leadership, heroism, omnipotence; aloofness becomes wisdom, self-sufficiency, independence. What—according to his particular solution—appear as shortcomings or flaws are always dimmed out or retouched.

Once they identify themselves with their idealized image, a number of effects follow. They will make claims on others and on life based on the prestige they feel entitled to because of their idealized self-image. They will impose a rigorous set of standards upon themselves in order to try to measure up to that image. They will cultivate pride, and with that will come the vulnerabilities associated with pride that lacks any foundation. Finally, they will despise themselves for all their limitations. Vicious circles will operate to strengthen all of these effects.

Eventually, as they grow to adulthood, a particular "solution" to all the inner conflicts and vulnerabilities will solidify. They will be either:

In Horney's view, mild anxiety disorders and full-blown personality disorders all fall under her basic scheme of neurosis as variations in the degree of severity and in the individual dynamics. The opposite of neurosis is a condition Horney calls self-realization, a state of being in which the person responds to the world with the full depth of their spontaneous feelings, rather than with anxiety-driven compulsion. Thus, the person grows to actualize their inborn potentialities. Horney compares this process to an acorn that grows and becomes a tree: the acorn has had the potential for a tree inside it all along.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Neurosis". The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language. HarperCollins Publishers. 2022. ISBN 978-0-618-82435-9.
  2. ^ a b c Knoff WF (July 1970). "A history of the concept of neurosis, with a memoir of William Cullen". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 127 (1): 80–84. doi:10.1176/ajp.127.1.80. PMID 4913140.
  3. ^ Bailey H (1927). Demonstrations of physical signs in clinical surgery (1st ed.). Bristol: J. Wright and Sons. p. 208.
  4. ^ Sertürner FW, Trommsdorff S (1817). "Ueber das Morphium, eine neue salzfähige Grundlage, und die Mekonsäure, als Hauptbestandtheile des Opiums". Annalen der Physik (in German). 55 (1): 56–89. Bibcode:1817AnP....55...56S. doi:10.1002/andp.18170550104.
  5. ^ Sertürner FW (1817). "Über das Morphium, eine neue salzfähige Grundlage, und die Mekonsäure, als Hauptbestandteile des Opiums". Annalen der Physik. 25 (1): 56–90. Bibcode:1817AnP....55...56S. doi:10.1002/andp.18170550104.
  6. ^ a b Seguin EC (1890). Lectures on some points in the treatment and management of neuroses. Appleton.
  7. ^ Offit P (March–April 2017). "God's Own Medicine". Skeptical Inquirer. 41 (2): 44.
  8. ^ xxii Introduction to Studies on Hysteria
  9. ^ Kesteven WB (July 1869). "Remarks on the use of the Bromides in the treatment of Epilepsy and other Neuroses". Journal of Mental Science. 15 (70): 205–213. doi:10.1192/S0368315X00233008.
  10. ^ Seguin EC (July 1877). "The Abuse and Use of Bromides". The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 4 (3): 445–462. doi:10.1097/00005053-187707000-00002. S2CID 145482861.
  11. ^ Freud S (1995). Five Lectures on Psycho-Analysis. Penguin. pp. 1–2, 10.
  12. ^ The details of her illness are taken from the case history published by Freud and Breuer in Freud S, Breuer J (August 2020). Studien über Hysterie. e-artnow. ISBN 978-80-268-2615-6., as well as from her medical records found by Albrecht Hirschmüller in the papers of Bellevue Sanatorium and published in his Hirschmüller A (1978). "Physiologie und Psychoanalvse im Leben und Werk Josef Breuers.". Jahrbuch der Psychoanalyse. Bern: Hans Huber.
  13. ^ Hirschmüller A (1978). "Physiologie und Psychoanalvse im Leben und Werk Josef Breuers.". Jahrbuch der Psychoanalyse. Bern: Hans Huber. p. 35.
  14. ^ Edinger D (1968). Bertha Pappenheim: Freud's Anna O. Congregation Solel. p. 15.
  15. ^ Orr-Andrawes A (1987). "The case of Anna O.: a neuropsychiatric perspective". Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association. 35 (2): 387–419. doi:10.1177/000306518703500205. PMID 3294985. S2CID 32184483.
  16. ^ Macmillan M (1990). Freud Evaluated - The Completed Arc. Elsevier. ISBN 978-0-08-086729-8.[page needed]
  17. ^ a b Webster R (1996). Why Freud Was Wrong: Sin, Science, And Psychoanalysis. Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-09128-7.[page needed]
  18. ^ Kaplan R (March 2004). "O Anna: being Bertha Pappenheim--historiography and biography". Australasian Psychiatry. 12 (1): 62–8. doi:10.1046/j.1039-8562.2003.02062.x. PMID 15715742. S2CID 33384890.
  19. ^ Clouston TS (1897). Clinical Lectures on Mental Diseases. Lea Brothers.[page needed][non-primary source needed]
  20. ^ a b Charcot JM (1889). Lectures on the Diseases of the Nervous System: Delivered at La Salpêtrière. unknown library. The New Sydenham Society.
  21. ^ Walton GL (1883). "Two Cases of Hysteria". Archives of Medicine. 10: 88–95.
  22. ^ a b White MB (August 1997). "Jean-Martin Charcot's contributions to the interface between neurology and psychiatry". The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences. Le Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques. 24 (3): 254–260. doi:10.1017/S0317167100021909. PMID 9276114. S2CID 7364585.
  23. ^ "Jean-Martin Charcot". A Science Odyssey: People and Discoveries. Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). 1998. Retrieved 13 October 2008.
  24. ^ Breuer J, Freud S (1956). "On the Psychical Mechanism of Hysterical Phenomena (1893)". The International Journal of Psycho-Analysis. 37: 8–13.
  25. ^ Hart, Otto Van Der; Horst, Rutger (14 April 1989). "The Dissociation Theory of Pierre Janet" (PDF). Retrieved 23 August 2023.
  26. ^ Freud S (1984). Metapsychology: The Theory Of Psychoanalysis. Freud Library. Vol. 11. UK: Penguin. p. 52. ISBN 978-0-14-021740-7.
  27. ^ Clouston TS (1891). The Neuroses of Development: Being the Morrison Lectures for 1890. Morison lectures ;1890. Oliver and Boyd. hdl:2027/wu.89051300259. OCLC 609217760.[page needed]
  28. ^ Breuer J, Freud S. Studies On Hysteria. Universal Digital Library. Basic Books.
  29. ^ Oulmont P, Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh (1894). Thérapeutique des névroses. Paris: O. Doin.
  30. ^ Kraepelin E (1899). Psychiatrie: ein Lehrbuch für Studirende und Aerzte. Lamar Soutter Library Univ. of Mass Medical School. Leipzig: J. A. Barth. ISBN 978-0-405-07442-4.
  31. ^ a b c Tremblay JM (2005-02-02). "Pierre Janet, 1859-1947 philosophe devenu médecin et psychologue". texte. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  32. ^ Janet P (1914). Névroses et idées fixes. University of Ottawa. Paris: Librairie Félix Alcan.
  33. ^ Pitman RK (1984-12-01). "Janet's Obsessions and Psychasthenia: a synopsis". The Psychiatric Quarterly. 56 (4): 291–314. doi:10.1007/BF01064475. PMID 6399751. S2CID 23032117.
  34. ^ "Accueil SFP". SFP (in French). Retrieved 2023-07-08.
  35. ^ a b Isabelle S. "Pierre Janet". FranceArchives (in French). Retrieved 2023-07-08.
  36. ^ López-Muñoz F, Ucha-Udabe R, Alamo C (December 2005). "The history of barbiturates a century after their clinical introduction". Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment. 1 (4): 329–343. PMC 2424120. PMID 18568113.
  37. ^ Janet P (1907). The Major Symptoms of Hysteria: Fifteen Lectures Given in the Medical School ... University of California. The Macmillan company.
  38. ^ "Pierre Janet: French Neurologist and Psychologist". 2022-11-03. Retrieved 2023-04-21.
  39. ^ a b Sletvold J (3 July 2016). "Freud's Three Theories of Neurosis: Towards a Contemporary Theory of Trauma and Defense". Psychoanalytic Dialogues. 26 (4): 460–475. doi:10.1080/10481885.2016.1190611. S2CID 151623430.
  40. ^ a b c Jacobson, E. (1929). Progressive relaxation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  41. ^ a b Nathoo, Ayesha (2016). "From Therapeutic Relaxation to Mindfulness in the Twentieth Century". The Restless Compendium. Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 71–80. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-45264-7_9. ISBN 978-3-319-45263-0.
  42. ^ a b Jacobson, E. (1938). Progressive relaxation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
  43. ^ a b Ibáñez-Tarín, C.; Manzanera-Escartí, R. (2012-09-01). "Técnicas cognitivo-conductuales de fácil aplicación en atención primaria (I)". SEMERGEN: Medicina de Familia (in Spanish). 38 (6): 377–387. doi:10.1016/j.semerg.2011.07.019. ISSN 1138-3593. PMID 22935834.
  44. ^ a b O'Toole, Marie T., ed. (2005). Encyclopedia & dictionary of medicine, nursing, & allied health (7th Revised ed.). Philadelphia: Saunders. ISBN 9781416026044.
  45. ^ "APsaA Mission & Vision | APsaA". www.apsa.org. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  46. ^ "Psychoanalysis and Neurosis". Collected Works of C.G. Jung, Volume 4: Freud & Psychoanalysis. 2014. pp. 243–251. doi:10.1515/9781400850938.243. ISBN 978-1-4008-5093-8.
  47. ^ Cannon WB (1915). Bodily changes in pain, hunger, fear, and rage. New York: Appleton-Century-Crofts. p. 211.
  48. ^ Parry M (October 2006). "Thomas W. Salmon: advocate of mental hygiene". American Journal of Public Health. 96 (10): 1741. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2006.095794. PMC 1586146. PMID 17008565.
  49. ^ Salmon TW (1917). The care and treatment of mental diseases and war neuroses ("shell shock") in the British army. University of California Libraries. New York City, War Work Committee of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene, Inc.
  50. ^ a b Freud S (1920). A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis. Harvard University. H. Liveright.
  51. ^ "OBITUARY". British Medical Journal. 1 (4185): 463–464. 1941-03-22. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.4185.463-a. PMC 2161727.
  52. ^ Ross TA (1949). The Common Neuroses (2nd ed.). Edward Arnold And Company.
  53. ^ Freud, Sigmund. 1955 [1923]. "The Ego and the Id." In Standard Edition 19, edited by J. Strachey. London: Hogarth Press. Lay summaries via Simply Psychology and JSTOR Daily Roundtable. Glossary via University of Notre Dame.
  54. ^ Lieberman, E. James; Kramer, Robert (2012). The letters of Sigmund Freud & Otto Rank: inside psychoanalysis. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins university press. ISBN 978-1-4214-0354-0.
  55. ^ Freud, Sigmund (1977). Inhibitions, Symptoms and Anxiety. Norton. ISBN 978-0-393-00874-6.
  56. ^ Jacobson, Edmund (1974). Progressive relaxation; a physiological and clinical investigation of muscular states and their significance in psychology and medical practice. Internet Archive. Chicago [Ill.] University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-39059-8.
  57. ^ "The man who invented relaxation". BBC News. 2015-11-04. Retrieved 2023-12-16.
  58. ^ Jacobson, Edmund (1976). You must relax. Internet Archive. New York : McGraw-Hill. ISBN 978-0-07-032182-3.
  59. ^ Cannon WB (1932). The Wisdom of the Body. New York: W. W. Norton and Company. pp. 177–201.
  60. ^ Logie HB (1938). Standard classified nomenclature of disease. Chicago: American Medical Association.
  61. ^ Taylor S, Sirois F (2012). Health Psychology (2nd Canadian ed.). McGraw-Hill Ryerson. ISBN 978-0070319790.
  62. ^ Stern A (October 1938). "Psychoanalytic Investigation of and Therapy in the Border Line Group of Neuroses". The Psychoanalytic Quarterly. 7 (4): 467–489. doi:10.1080/21674086.1938.11925367.
  63. ^ Harms E (June 1937). "The Social Bacground of Occupational Neuroses". The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease. 85 (6): 689–695. doi:10.1097/00005053-193706000-00004.
  64. ^ a b Russon J (2003). Human Experience: Philosophy, Neurosis, and the Elements of Everyday Life. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-5754-0.[page needed]
  65. ^ a b Jacobson K (2006). "The interpersonal expression of human spatiality: a phenomenological interpretation of anorexia nervosa". Chiasmi International: 157–174. doi:10.5840/chiasmi2006824.
  66. ^ Shephard, Ben. A War of Nerves: Soldiers and Psychiatrists, 1914–1994. London: Jonathan Cape, 2000.[ISBN missing][page needed]
  67. ^ a b Bryant R, Harvey A (2000). Acute Stress Disorder: A Handbook Of Theory, Assessment, And Treatment. Washington, D.C.: American Psychological Association. pp. 3–40, 87–134.
  68. ^ "PTSD from Armistice Day to DSM-5 - VA News". news.va.gov. 2013-11-07. Retrieved 2023-04-21.
  69. ^ "American Journal of Psychoanalysis". 2018-02-26. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  70. ^ "Former APA Presidents". www.apa.org. Retrieved 2023-07-08.
  71. ^ Eysenck HJ (1950). dimensions of personality. Internet Archive. routledge & kegan paul limited.
  72. ^ Guex G (2015). Kahr B, Rudnytski PL (eds.). The Abandonment Neurosis. The History of Psychoanalysis Series. Translated by Douglass PD. London: Karnac Books. ISBN 978-1-78220-191-5.
  73. ^ Rogers CR (1952). "Communication: Its Blocking and Its Facilitation". ETC. 9 (2): 83–88. JSTOR 42581028.
  74. ^ "About NASAP". North American Society for Adlerian Psychology. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  75. ^ a b c US Army (1952). DSM-1 Full PDF.
  76. ^ Andreasen NC (October 2010). "Posttraumatic stress disorder: a history and a critique". Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 1208 (Psychiatric and Neurologic Aspects of War): 67–71. Bibcode:2010NYASA1208...67A. doi:10.1111/j.1749-6632.2010.05699.x. PMID 20955327. S2CID 42645212.
  77. ^ a b American Psychiatric Association (1952). Diagnostic and Statistical Manual. American Psychiatric Association Mental Hospital Service. p. 326.3. ISBN 978-0890420171.
  78. ^ Fitzpatrick L (2010-01-07). "A brief history of antidepressants". Time. Retrieved 19 October 2014.
  79. ^ Lemke TL, Williams DA (2008). Foye's Principles of Medicinal Chemistry (6th ed.). Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 568–600.
  80. ^ Abramowitz JS, Deacon BJ, Whiteside PH (2010). Exposure Therapy for Anxiety: Principles and Practice. Guilford Press. ISBN 978-1-60918-016-4.
  81. ^ Ludwig BJ, Piech E (1951). "Some anticonvulsant agents derived from 1, 3-propanediol". J Am Chem Soc. 73 (12): 5779–5781. doi:10.1021/ja01156a086.
  82. ^ Tone A (2009). "The Fashionable Pill". The Age of Anxiety: A History of America's Turbulent Affair with Tranquilizers. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-08658-0.
  83. ^ May R (1950). The meaning of anxiety. New York: Ronald Press Company. doi:10.1037/10760-000.
  84. ^ Pols H, Oak S (December 2007). "War & military mental health: the US psychiatric response in the 20th century". American Journal of Public Health. 97 (12): 2132–2142. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2006.090910. PMC 2089086. PMID 17971561.
  85. ^ "Our Mission and History". Albert Ellis Institute. Retrieved 2023-04-15.
  86. ^ Hilton C (3 July 2018). "Dr Russell Barton, Belsen concentration camp and 1960s psychiatric hospitals in England: the controversy". Contemporary British History. 32 (3): 307–335. doi:10.1080/13619462.2018.1477597. S2CID 149881128.
  87. ^ Barton R (2013). Institutional Neurosis. Butterworth-Heinemann. ISBN 978-1-4831-8341-1.[page needed][non-primary source needed]
  88. ^ Shorter E (2005). "Benzodiazepines". A Historical Dictionary of Psychiatry. Oxford University Press. pp. 41–42. ISBN 978-0-19-517668-1.
  89. ^ a b Conis E (2008-02-18). "Valium had many ancestors". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2023-04-15.
  90. ^ Shorter E (2008-10-28). Before Prozac: The Troubled History of Mood Disorders in Psychiatry. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-970933-5.
  91. ^ Mora G, Lopez Pinero GM (July 1966). "Origenes historicos del concepto de neurosis; Valencia, Catedra e Instituto de Historia de la Medicina, 1963, p. 206". Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences. 2 (3): 276–278. doi:10.1002/1520-6696(196607)2:3<276::AID-JHBS2300020313>3.0.CO;2-Z.
  92. ^ López Pinero JM (1983). Historical Origins of the Concept of Neurosis. doi:10.1017/CBO9780511753510. ISBN 978-0-521-24972-0.[page needed]
  93. ^ Boydston G (1974). A history and status report of Neurotics Anonymous, an organization offering self-help for the mentally and emotionally disturbed (Ed.M thesis). Miami, Florida: Barry University. OCLC 14126024.
  94. ^ Sagarin E (1969). "Chapter 9. Mental patients: are they their brothers' therapists?". Odd man in; societies of deviants in America. Chicago, Illinois: Quadrangle Books. pp. 210–232. ISBN 978-0-531-06344-6. OCLC 34435.
  95. ^ Dąbrowski K (1964). Positive disintegration. Internet Archive. Boston, Little, Brown.
  96. ^ "Behavior Analysis (Div. 25)". www.apadivisions.org. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  97. ^ Eysenck HJ, Rachman S (2014). The Causes and Cures of Neurosis: An Introduction to Modern Behaviour Therapy Based on Learning Theory and the Principles of Conditioning. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-84101-6.[page needed]
  98. ^ Derogatis LR, Lipman RS, Rickels K, Uhlenhuth EH, Covi L (January 1974). "The Hopkins Symptom Checklist (HSCL): a self-report symptom inventory". Behavioral Science. 19 (1): 1–15. doi:10.1002/bs.3830190102. PMID 4808738.
  99. ^ Fossion P, Rejas MC, Servais L, Pelc I, Hirsch S (2003). "Family approach with grandchildren of Holocaust survivors". American Journal of Psychotherapy. 57 (4): 519–527. doi:10.1176/appi.psychotherapy.2003.57.4.519. PMID 14735877.
  100. ^ "ISTSS - History". istss.org. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  101. ^ Rycroft C (1968). Anxiety and Neurosis. Routledge & CRC Press. ISBN 978-0-946439-52-2. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  102. ^ "Psychologist McNeil Dies At 50 | Ann Arbor District Library". aadl.org. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  103. ^ McNeil EB (1970). Neuroses and Personality Disorders. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-611509-0. OCLC 97389.
  104. ^ Spielberger C, Gorssuch R, Lushene P, Vagg P, Jacobs G (1983). Manual for the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. Consulting Psychologists Press.[page needed]
  105. ^ Janov A (1980). "Introduction". Prisoners of Pain: Unlocking the Power of the Mind to End Suffering. Anchor Press/Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-385-15791-9.[page needed]
  106. ^ Blazer DG (August 1992). "William W.K. Zung, MDiv, MS, MD". Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology. 12 (4): 234. doi:10.1097/00004714-199208000-00003.
  107. ^ Zung WW (November 1971). "A Rating Instrument For Anxiety Disorders". Psychosomatics. 12 (6): 371–379. doi:10.1016/S0033-3182(71)71479-0. PMID 5172928.
  108. ^ a b c d Andersen J, Kristensen AS, Bang-Andersen B, Strømgaard K (2009). "Recent advances in the understanding of the interaction of antidepressant drugs with serotonin and norepinephrine transporters". Chem. Commun. (25): 3677–92. doi:10.1039/b903035m. PMID 19557250.
  109. ^ a b Richard C. Dart (2004). Medical Toxicology. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 836–. ISBN 978-0-7817-2845-4.
  110. ^ "In Memoriam: Lynda Lytle Holmstrom". www.bc.edu. Retrieved 2023-04-13.
  111. ^ Holmstrom LL, Burgess AW (1978). The Victim of Rape: Institutional Reactions. Wiley-Interscience. ISBN 978-0471407850.
  112. ^ Frishman WH, Cheng-Lai A, Nawarskas J (2005). Current Cardiovascular Drugs. Current Science Group. p. 152. ISBN 978-1-57340-221-7. Retrieved 2010-09-07.
  113. ^ Arcangelo VP, Peterson AM (2006). Pharmacotherapeutics for advanced practice: a practical approach. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. p. 205. ISBN 978-0-7817-5784-3. Retrieved 2010-09-07.
  114. ^ "Sir James Black, OM". The Telegraph. March 23, 2010. from the original on March 27, 2010. Retrieved March 25, 2010.
  115. ^ Balon R, Starcevic V, Silberman E, Cosci F, Dubovsky S, Fava GA, et al. (2020-03-09). "The rise and fall and rise of benzodiazepines: a return of the stigmatized and repressed". Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria. 42 (3): 243–244. doi:10.1590/1516-4446-2019-0773. PMC 7236156. PMID 32159714.
  116. ^ Washton AM, Zweben JE (2011). Treating Alcohol and Drug Problems in Psychotherapy Practice Doing What Works. New York: Guilford Publications. p. 47. ISBN 978-1-4625-0438-1.
  117. ^ Shorter E (2005). "B". A Historical Dictionary of Psychiatry. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-029201-0. from the original on 28 March 2017.
  118. ^ US patent 3296249, Bell SC, "5-monocyclic aryl-1,3-dihydro-2h-1,4-benzodiazepin-2-ones", published 1967-01-03, issued 1967-01-03, assigned to American Home Products 
  119. ^ Cook BL (12 July 2009). "Stanley C. Bell, 78, scientist". www.inquirer.com. Retrieved 2023-04-16.
  120. ^ "Brian Shaw". CBT Toronto - The Clinic on Dupont. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
  121. ^ "Gary Emery". Nebraska Authors. Retrieved 2023-04-23.
  122. ^ Bishop et al. 2004, pp. 230–231: "Much of the interest in the clinical applications of mindfulness has been sparked by the introduction of Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR), a manualized treatment program originally developed for the management of chronic pain (Kabat-Zinn, 1982; Kabat-Zinn, Lipworth, & Burney, 1985; Kabat-Zinn, Lipworth, Burney, & Sellers, 1987)."
  123. ^ a b Antonovsky A (1979). Health, Stress, and Coping. Jossey-Bass Publishers. ISBN 978-0-87589-412-6.
  124. ^ a b Rachman S (1980-01-01). "Emotional processing". Behaviour Research and Therapy. 18 (1): 51–60. doi:10.1016/0005-7967(80)90069-8. PMID 7369988.
  125. ^ Horwitz AV, Wakefield JC (2007). The Loss of Sadness. Oxford. ISBN 978-0-19-531304-8.
  126. ^ a b Wilson M (March 1993). "DSM-III and the transformation of American psychiatry: a history". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 150 (3): 399–410. doi:10.1176/ajp.150.3.399. PMID 8434655.
  127. ^ a b American Psychiatric Association. Task Force on Nomenclature and Statistics; American Psychiatric Association. Committee on Nomenclature and Statistics. Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders (1980). Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders. Internet Archive. Washington, D.C.: American Psychiatric Association.
  128. ^ a b "AAPCSW History | American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work". www.aapcsw.org. Retrieved 2023-06-29.
  129. ^ Maslach C, Jackson SE (1981). "The measurement of experienced burnout". Journal of Occupational Behavior. 2 (2): 99–113. doi:10.1002/job.4030020205. S2CID 53003646.
  130. ^ Maslach C, Jackson SE, Leiter MP (1996). "MBI: The Maslach Burnout Inventory: Manual". Palo Alto: Consulting Psychologists Press.
  131. ^ Tamminga SJ, Emal LM, Boschman JS, Levasseur A, Thota A, Ruotsalainen JH, et al. (May 2023). "Individual-level interventions for reducing occupational stress in healthcare workers". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews. 2023 (5): CD002892. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD002892.pub6. PMC 10175042. PMID 37169364.
  132. ^ American Society of Health-System Pharmacists (13 November 2017). "Alprazolam Monograph for Professionals". Drugs.com. from the original on 7 December 2010. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  133. ^ Fischer J, Ganellin CR (2006). Analogue-based Drug Discovery. John Wiley & Sons. p. 536. ISBN 9783527607495. from the original on 28 August 2021. Retrieved 13 September 2020.
  134. ^ Ainsworth SJ (9 December 2013). "Hester Dies At 80: Upjohn medicinal chemist designed major drugs". Chemical & Engineering News. American Chemical Society. 91 (49).
  135. ^ Waltz TJ, Hayes SC (2010). "Acceptance and Commitment Therapy". In Kazantzis N, Reinecke MA, Freeman A (eds.). Cognitive and Behavioral Theories in Clinical Practice. New York: Guilford Press. pp. 155–156. ISBN 978-1-60623-342-9. OCLC 317927326.
  136. ^ https://irp.fas.org/doddir/army/fm4-02-51.pdf[full citation needed]
  137. ^ Miller WR (April 1983). "Motivational Interviewing with Problem Drinkers". Behavioural Psychotherapy. 11 (2): 147–172. doi:10.1017/S0141347300006583. S2CID 4148442.
  138. ^ Zigmond AS, Snaith RP (June 1983). "The hospital anxiety and depression scale". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 67 (6): 361–370. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0447.1983.tb09716.x. PMID 6880820. S2CID 2264965.
  139. ^ Sims A (2004-02-28). "Philip Snaith". BMJ. 328 (7438): 527. PMC 351900.
  140. ^ Cohen S, Kamarck T, Mermelstein R (December 1983). "A global measure of perceived stress". Journal of Health and Social Behavior. 24 (4): 385–396. doi:10.2307/2136404. JSTOR 2136404. PMID 6668417. S2CID 21357701.
  141. ^ "Thomas W. Kamarck, Ph.D. | Psychology | University of Pittsburgh". psychology.pitt.edu. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  142. ^ "Mermelstein, Robin J. | Psychology | University of Illinois Chicago". Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  143. ^ Drinka GF (1984). The Birth of Neurosis: Myth, Malady, and the Victorians. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-44999-5.
  144. ^ Lazarus RS, Folkman S (1984). Stress, Appraisal, and Coping. New York: Springer.
  145. ^ Ekman P, Campos J (2003). "Richard Stanley Lazarus (1922-2002)". American Psychologist. 58 (9): 756–757. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.58.9.756.
  146. ^ Green E (12 May 2016). "What are the most-cited publications in the social sciences (according to Google Scholar)?". Impact of Social Sciences. London School of Economics.
  147. ^ a b c Meichenbaum D (2009). "Stress inoculation training.". In O'Donohue WT, Fisher JE (eds.). General principles and empirically supported techniques of cognitive behavior therapy. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. pp. 627–630. ISBN 978-0-470-22777-0 – via PsycNET.
  148. ^ Foa EB, Kozak MJ (January 1986). "Emotional processing of fear: exposure to corrective information". Psychological Bulletin. 99 (1): 20–35. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.99.1.20. PMID 2871574. S2CID 2317269.
  149. ^ "History of EMDR". Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing. EMDR Institute. 15 April 2015. Retrieved 2023-05-08.
  150. ^ a b Rutter M (July 1987). "Psychosocial resilience and protective mechanisms". American Journal of Orthopsychiatry. 57 (3): 316–331. doi:10.1111/j.1939-0025.1987.tb03541.x. PMID 3303954.
  151. ^ a b "The ESTSS history". The European Society of Traumatic Stress Studies. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  152. ^ a b Meyer TJ, Miller ML, Metzger RL, Borkovec TD (1990-01-01). "Development and validation of the Penn State Worry Questionnaire". Behaviour Research and Therapy. 28 (6): 487–495. doi:10.1016/0005-7967(90)90135-6. PMID 2076086.
  153. ^ Beck AT, Epstein N, Brown G, Steer RA (December 1988). "An inventory for measuring clinical anxiety: psychometric properties". Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 56 (6): 893–897. doi:10.1037/0022-006X.56.6.893. PMID 3204199.
  154. ^ Beck AT, Epstein N, Brown G, Steer R (2012-01-09). "Beck Anxiety Inventory". Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. doi:10.1037/t02025-000.
  155. ^ "Stevan Hobfoll". scholar.google.com. Retrieved 2023-03-18.
  156. ^ Hobfoll SE (March 1989). "Conservation of resources. A new attempt at conceptualizing stress". The American Psychologist. 44 (3): 513–524. doi:10.1037/0003-066X.44.3.513. PMID 2648906. S2CID 2258621.
  157. ^ Herman JL, Perry JC, van der Kolk BA (April 1989). "Childhood trauma in borderline personality disorder". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 146 (4): 490–495. doi:10.1176/ajp.146.4.490. PMID 2929750.
  158. ^ Richards A (June 2020). "The Organizational Structure of the American Psychoanalytic Association: The Politics of Exclusion". Psychoanalytic Review. 107 (3): 211–227. doi:10.1521/prev.2020.107.3.211. PMID 32716719. S2CID 220840824.
  159. ^ "ADAA Celebrates 40 Years | Anxiety and Depression Association of America, ADAA". adaa.org. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  160. ^ "The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook". New Harbinger Publications, Inc. Retrieved 2023-04-16.
  161. ^ "About the IKHS". International Karen Horney Society.
  162. ^ Linehan MM (1 December 1991). "Cognitive-Behavioral Treatment of Chronically Parasuicidal Borderline Patients". Archives of General Psychiatry. 48 (12): 1060–1064. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1991.01810360024003. PMID 1845222.
  163. ^ John Marzillier, To Hell and Back (2012) p 12 and p 02
  164. ^ Kessler RC, McGonagle KA, Zhao S, Nelson CB (1 January 1994). "Lifetime and 12-Month Prevalence of DSM-III-R Psychiatric Disorders in the United States: Results From the National Comorbidity Survey". Archives of General Psychiatry. 51 (1): 8–19. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1994.03950010008002. PMID 8279933. S2CID 22462381.
  165. ^ "About Us | ADAVIC Anxiety Disorders Association of Victoria, Inc". www.adavic.org.au. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  166. ^ "Dr Anthony P Mannarino | ASK". Psychwire. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  167. ^ "Dr Judith A Cohen | ASK". Psychwire. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  168. ^ "Dr Esther Deblinger | ASK". Psychwire. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  169. ^ "Depression Anxiety Stress Scales - DASS". www2.psy.unsw.edu.au. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  170. ^ "Obituary: Emeritus Professor Sydney (Syd) Harold Lovibond Hon FAPS | APS". psychology.org.au. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  171. ^ "Professor Peter Lovibond". UNSW Sites. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  172. ^ Lovibond SH, Lovibond PH (12 September 2011). Depression Anxiety Stress Scales. APA PsycTests (Report). doi:10.1037/t01004-000.
  173. ^ Antony MM, Bieling PJ, Cox BJ, Enns MW, Swinson RP (June 1998). "Psychometric properties of the 42-item and 21-item versions of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales in clinical groups and a community sample". Psychological Assessment. 10 (2): 176–181. doi:10.1037/1040-3590.10.2.176.
  174. ^ "About". Phoenix Australia. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  175. ^ Kessler RC, Sonnega A, Bromet E, Hughes M, Nelson CB (December 1995). "Posttraumatic stress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey". Archives of General Psychiatry. 52 (12): 1048–1060. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1995.03950240066012. PMID 7492257. S2CID 14189766.
  176. ^ "Professor Alexander McFarlane | Researcher Profiles". Adelaide, South Australia: The University of Adelaide.
  177. ^ a b "Professor Chris Brewin FBA". The British Academy. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  178. ^ "Dr Tim Dalgleish:: Cambridge Neuroscience". www.neuroscience.cam.ac.uk. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  179. ^ "Prof. Stephen Joseph – Positive Psychology, Trauma, Psychotherapy, Self-Help". Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  180. ^ Brewin CR, Dalgleish T, Joseph S (October 1996). "A dual representation theory of posttraumatic stress disorder". Psychological Review. 103 (4): 670–686. doi:10.1037/0033-295X.103.4.670. PMID 8888651.
  181. ^ Bisson JI (August 2009). "Psychological and social theories of post-traumatic stress disorder". Psychiatry. 8 (8): 290–292. doi:10.1016/j.mppsy.2009.05.003.
  182. ^ "History - WAPCEPC and PCEP Journal for Person Centered Psychotherapy and Counselling". www.pce-world.org. Retrieved 2023-04-15.
  183. ^ "Startseite". DeGPT (in German). Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  184. ^ Breslau N, Kessler RC, Chilcoat HD, Schultz LR, Davis GC, Andreski P (July 1998). "Trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder in the community: the 1996 Detroit Area Survey of Trauma". Archives of General Psychiatry. 55 (7): 626–632. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.55.7.626. PMID 9672053. S2CID 2144000.
  185. ^ Foa EB, Meadows EA (February 1997). "Psychosocial treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder: a critical review". Annual Review of Psychology. 48 (1): 449–480. doi:10.1146/annurev.psych.48.1.449. PMID 9046566.
  186. ^ Foa EB, Cashman L, Jaycox L, Perry K (December 1997). "The validation of a self-report measure of posttraumatic stress disorder: the Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale. Psychological assessment". APA PsycNet. 9 (4): 445.
  187. ^ Chorpita BF, Barlow DH (July 1998). "The development of anxiety: the role of control in the early environment". Psychological Bulletin. 124 (1): 3–21. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.124.1.3. PMID 9670819. S2CID 14301021.
  188. ^ "Dr Kirk Strosahl | ASK". Psychwire. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  189. ^ "Kelly G. Wilson". Guilford Press. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  190. ^ "Who We Are". Anxiety Canada. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  191. ^ Ehlers A, Clark DM (April 2000). "A cognitive model of posttraumatic stress disorder". Behaviour Research and Therapy. 38 (4): 319–345. doi:10.1016/S0005-7967(99)00123-0. PMID 10761279.
  192. ^ a b "Power Threat Meaning Framework". BPS. Retrieved 2023-02-18.
  193. ^ Kessler RC (2000-05-31). "Posttraumatic stress disorder: the burden to the individual and to society". The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. 61 (suppl 5): 4–12, discussion 13–4. PMID 10761674.
  194. ^ "Evangelia Demerouti". www.tue.nl. Retrieved 2023-06-29.
  195. ^ Demerouti E, Bakker AB, Nachreiner F, Schaufeli WB (June 2001). "The job demands-resources model of burnout". The Journal of Applied Psychology. 86 (3): 499–512. doi:10.1037/0021-9010.86.3.499. PMID 11419809.
  196. ^ Bakker AB, Demerouti E (2007). "The Job Demands-Resources model: State of the art". Journal of Managerial Psychology. 22 (3): 309–328. doi:10.1108/02683940710733115. S2CID 1221398.
  197. ^ Kroenke K, Spitzer RL, Williams JB (September 2001). "The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure". Journal of General Internal Medicine. 16 (9): 606–613. doi:10.1046/j.1525-1497.2001.016009606.x. PMC 1495268. PMID 11556941.
  198. ^ Spitzer RL, Williams JB, Kroenke K, Linzer M, deGruy FV, Hahn SR, et al. (December 1994). "Utility of a new procedure for diagnosing mental disorders in primary care. The PRIME-MD 1000 study". JAMA. 272 (22): 1749–1756. doi:10.1001/jama.1994.03520220043029. PMID 7966923. S2CID 13836141.
  199. ^ "PDF of the Patient Health Questionnaire-9" (PDF). Pfizer's PHQ Screeners. (PDF) from the original on 10 January 2022. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  200. ^ "Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR)" (PDF). Archive.Today. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
  201. ^ Ohman A, Mineka S (July 2001). "Fears, phobias, and preparedness: toward an evolved module of fear and fear learning". Psychological Review. 108 (3): 483–522. doi:10.1037/0033-295X.108.3.483. PMID 11488376.
  202. ^ "Susan Mineka". Northwestern Scholars. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  203. ^ "Axel Perkonigg | PhD | Research profile". Research Gate.
  204. ^ Perkonigg A, Kessler RC, Storz S, Wittchen H (January 2000). "Traumatic events and post-traumatic stress disorder in the community: prevalence, risk factors and comorbidity". Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica. 101 (1): 46–59. doi:10.1034/j.1600-0447.2000.101001046.x. PMID 10674950. S2CID 23392803.
  205. ^ Yehuda R (January 2002). "Post-traumatic stress disorder". The New England Journal of Medicine. 346 (2): 108–114. doi:10.1056/NEJMra012941. PMID 11784878.
  206. ^ "The PTSD Workbook". New Harbinger Publications, Inc. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  207. ^ "Williams, Mary Beth - ICISF". icisf.org/. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  208. ^ Poijula S. "Soili Poijula". Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  209. ^ Ozer EJ, Best SR, Lipsey TL, Weiss DS (January 2003). "Predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder and symptoms in adults: a meta-analysis". Psychological Bulletin. 129 (1): 52–73. doi:10.1037/0033-2909.129.1.52. PMID 12555794.
  210. ^ "Emily J. Ozer PhD - UC Berkeley Public Health Faculty". UC Berkeley Public Health. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  211. ^ "Daniel Weiss | UCSF Profiles". profiles.ucsf.edu. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  212. ^ Brewin CR, Holmes EA (May 2003). "Psychological theories of posttraumatic stress disorder". Clinical Psychology Review. Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. 23 (3): 339–376. doi:10.1016/S0272-7358(03)00033-3. PMID 12729677.
  213. ^ "Connor, Kathryn M." Pri-Med. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  214. ^ "Jonathan R.T. Davidson | Scholars@Duke profile". scholars.duke.edu. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  215. ^ Connor KM, Davidson JR (September 2003). "Development of a new resilience scale: the Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale (CD-RISC)". Depression and Anxiety. 18 (2): 76–82. doi:10.1002/da.10113. PMID 12964174. S2CID 14347861.
  216. ^ Besèr A, Sorjonen K, Wahlberg K, Peterson U, Nygren A, Asberg M (February 2014). "Construction and evaluation of a self rating scale for stress-induced exhaustion disorder, the Karolinska Exhaustion Disorder Scale". Scandinavian Journal of Psychology. 55 (1): 72–82. doi:10.1111/sjop.12088. PMC 4235404. PMID 24236500.
  217. ^ a b "Overview | Post-traumatic stress disorder | Guidance | NICE". www.nice.org.uk. 2018-12-05. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  218. ^ "Kurt Kroenke, MD, MACP". medicine.iu.edu. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  219. ^ Spitzer RL, Kroenke K, Williams JB, Löwe B (May 2006). "A brief measure for assessing generalized anxiety disorder: the GAD-7". Archives of Internal Medicine. 166 (10): 1092–1097. doi:10.1001/archinte.166.10.1092. PMID 16717171. S2CID 17599514.
  220. ^ "About PTSD". PTSD Association of Canada. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  221. ^ "Home | Division of Trauma Psychology". www.apatraumadivision.org. Retrieved 2023-06-25.
  222. ^ "APA Announces Publication of the Inaugural Issue of Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy". www.apa.org. Retrieved 2023-06-25.
  223. ^ "AmitEtkin". Twitter. Retrieved 2023-07-04.
  224. ^ Etkin A, Wager TD (October 2007). "Functional neuroimaging of anxiety: a meta-analysis of emotional processing in PTSD, social anxiety disorder, and specific phobia". The American Journal of Psychiatry. 164 (10): 1476–1488. doi:10.1176/appi.ajp.2007.07030504. PMC 3318959. PMID 17898336.
  225. ^ "Summary of Product Characteristics" (PDF). European Medicine Agency. (PDF) from the original on 2014-10-29. Retrieved 2013-10-14.
  226. ^ "TGA eBS - Product and Consumer Medicine Information Licence". www.ebs.tga.gov.au. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  227. ^ "Agomelatine - an overview | ScienceDirect Topics". www.sciencedirect.com. Retrieved 2023-12-07.
  228. ^ Mitchell AJ, Chan M, Bhatti H, Halton M, Grassi L, Johansen C, Meader N (February 2011). "Prevalence of depression, anxiety, and adjustment disorder in oncological, haematological, and palliative-care settings: a meta-analysis of 94 interview-based studies". The Lancet. Oncology. 12 (2): 160–174. doi:10.1016/S1470-2045(11)70002-X. PMID 21251875.
  229. ^ "ORCID". orcid.org. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  230. ^ "Brief Interventions for Radical Change". New Harbinger Publications, Inc. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  231. ^ "Patricia Robinson | Patricia Robinson, PhD". www.patriciarobinsonphd.com. Retrieved 2023-07-15.
  232. ^ Van der Kolk BA (2015). The Body keeps the score: brain, mind and body in the healing of trauma. New York, NY: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-312774-1.
  233. ^ Bhattacharya S (2014-11-05). "The lifelong cost of burying our traumatic experiences". New Scientist. Retrieved 2019-12-13.
  234. ^ Kleinstäuber M, Witthöft M, Steffanowski A, van Marwijk H, Hiller W, Lambert MJ (November 2014). "Pharmacological interventions for somatoform disorders in adults". The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (11): CD010628. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD010628.pub2. PMID 25379990.
  235. ^ "Profile". Division of Health Sciences. University of Otago. Retrieved 2023-07-08.
  236. ^ "Catherine Pittman, Ph.D, HSSP". Anxiety.org. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  237. ^ "Elizabeth M. Karle". New Harbinger Publications, Inc. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  238. ^ "Why PTSD UK is here – PTSD UK". Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  239. ^ "S.J. Scott". www.goodreads.com. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  240. ^ "PTSD Treatments". American Psychological Association. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  241. ^ "VA.gov | Veterans Affairs". www.ptsd.va.gov. Retrieved 2023-06-26.
  242. ^ "Food and mood". www.deakin.edu.au. Retrieved 2023-09-14.
  243. ^ "Faith G. Harper - About Me". www.faithgharper.com. Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  244. ^ "ACCUEIL". PIERRE JANET | Association PIERRE JANET (in French). Retrieved 2023-04-21.
  245. ^ "Inauguration de l'ASSOCIATION FRANÇAISE PIERRE JANET - [Réseau Janet - Isabelle Saillot]". isabellesaillot.net. Retrieved 2023-04-21.
  246. ^ "Member societies – ESTSS". Retrieved 2023-04-14.
  247. ^ Sharpless BA, Barber JP (February 2011). "A Clinician's Guide to PTSD Treatments for Returning Veterans". Professional Psychology, Research and Practice. 42 (1): 8–15. doi:10.1037/a0022351. PMC 3070301. PMID 21475611.
  248. ^ "Stress Inoculation Training" (PDF). VA PTSD.
  249. ^ Lambert MJ, ed. (2004). Bergin and Garfield's Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavioral Change. New York: Wiley.[page needed]
  250. ^ Sharma M, Rush SE (October 2014). "Mindfulness-based stress reduction as a stress management intervention for healthy individuals: a systematic review". Journal of Evidence-Based Complementary & Alternative Medicine. 19 (4): 271–286. doi:10.1177/2156587214543143. PMID 25053754.
  251. ^ "Tetris used to prevent post-traumatic stress symptoms" (Press release). NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Centre. 3 April 2017.
  252. ^ Fanai M, Khan MA (2021). "Acute Stress Disorder". StatPearls. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing. PMID 32809650. Retrieved 2021-03-14.
  253. ^ Astill Wright L, Sijbrandij M, Sinnerton R, Lewis C, Roberts NP, Bisson JI (December 2019). "Pharmacological prevention and early treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder and acute stress disorder: a systematic review and meta-analysis". Translational Psychiatry. 9 (1): 334. doi:10.1038/s41398-019-0673-5. PMC 6901463. PMID 31819037.
  254. ^ "Arbetsmiljöns betydelse för symtom på depression och utmattningssyndrom". Statens beredning för medicinsk och social utvärdering (SBU) [Swedish Agency for Health Technology Assessment and Assessment of Social Services] (in Swedish). 2014-02-19. Retrieved 2022-07-15.
  255. ^ Boeree CG (2002). "A Bio-Social Theory of Neurosis". Retrieved 2009-04-21.
  256. ^ a b Jung CG, Jaffé A (1989). Memories, Dreams and Reflections (rev. ed.). New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 0-679-72395-1.
  257. ^ a b Jung CG (1964). Man and his symbols. Garden City: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-05221-9.
  258. ^ a b c Horney K (1991). Neurosis and Human Growth: The Struggle Toward Self-Realization (Reissued with a new foreword ed.). New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. ISBN 978-0-393-30775-7.
  1. ^ . University of Massachusetts Worcester Campus Center for Mindfulness. Archived from the original on 2012-04-14. The Stress Reduction Program, founded by Dr. Jon Kabat-Zinn in 1979...

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Janov A (1991). "Neurosis". Retrieved 2009-04-21.

neurosis, this, article, about, term, psychology, band, band, confused, with, psychosis, neuroticism, neuroses, term, mainly, used, today, followers, freudian, thinking, describe, mental, disorders, caused, past, anxiety, often, that, been, repressed, recent, . This article is about the term in psychology For the band see Neurosis band Not to be confused with Psychosis or Neuroticism Neurosis pl neuroses is a term mainly used today by followers of Freudian thinking to describe mental disorders caused by past anxiety often that has been repressed In recent history the term has been used to refer to anxiety related conditions more generally NeurosisOther namesPsychoneurosis neurotic disorderSpecialtyPsychiatry clinical psychologyThe term neurosis is no longer used in condition names or categories by the World Health Organization s International Classification of Diseases ICD or the American Psychiatric Association s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM According to the American Heritage Medical Dictionary of 2007 the term is no longer used in psychiatric diagnosis 1 Neurosis is distinguished from psychosis which refers to a loss of touch with reality Its descendant term neuroticism refers to a personality trait of being prone to anxiousness and mental collapse The term neuroticism is also no longer used for DSM or ICD conditions however it is a common name for one of the Big Five personality traits A similar concept is included in the ICD 11 as the condition negative affectivity Contents 1 History 1 1 A broad condition 1769 1879 1 2 Breuer Freud and contemporaries 1880 1939 1 3 1939 1952 1 4 DSM I 1952 1968 1 5 DSM II 1968 1980 1 6 DSM III 1980 1994 1 7 DSM IV 1994 2013 1 8 DSM 5 2013 current 2 Prevention 3 Etiology 3 1 Historic versions of the DSM and ICD 3 2 Psychoanalytic Freudian theory 3 3 Jungian theory 3 4 Horney s theory 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Bibliography 6 External linksHistory editA broad condition 1769 1879 edit nbsp William Cullen coined the term neurosis The term neurosis was coined by Scottish doctor William Cullen to refer to disorders of sense and motion caused by a general affection of the nervous system The term is derived from the Greek word neuron neῦron nerve and the suffix osis wsis diseased or abnormal condition It was first used in print in Cullen s System of Nosology first published in Latin in 1769 2 Cullen used the term to describe various nervous disorders and symptoms that could not be explained physiologically Physical features however were almost inevitably present and physical diagnostic tests such as exaggerated knee jerks loss of the gag reflex and dermatographia were used into the 20th century 3 French psychiatrist Phillipe Pinnel s Nosographie philosophique ou La methode de l analyse appliquee a la medecine 1798 was greatly inspired by Cullen It divided medical conditions into five categories with one being neurosis This was divided into four basic types of mental disorder melancholia mania dementia and idiotism 2 Morphine was first isolated from opium in 1805 by German chemist Friedrich Serturner After the publication of his third paper on the topic in 1817 4 morphine became more widely known and used to treat neuroses and other kinds of mental distress 5 6 After becoming addicted to this highly addictive substance he warned I consider it my duty to attract attention to the terrible effects of this new substance I called morphium in order that calamity may be averted 7 German psychologist Johann Friedrich Herbart used the term repression in 1824 in a discussion of unconscious ideas competing to get into consciousness 8 The tranquilising properties of potassium bromide were noted publicly by British doctor Charles Locock in 1857 Over the coming decades this and other bromides were used in great quantities to calm people with neuroses 6 9 10 This led to many cases of bromism Breuer Freud and contemporaries 1880 1939 edit nbsp Josef Breuer discovered the psychoanalytic technique of treating neurosis Austrian psychiatrist Josef Breuer first used psychoanalysis to treat hysteria in 1880 1882 11 Bertha Pappenheim was treated for a variety of symptoms that began when her father suddenly fell seriously ill in mid 1880 during a family holiday in Ischl His illness was a turning point in her life While sitting up at night at his sickbed she was suddenly tormented by hallucinations and a state of anxiety 12 At first the family did not react to these symptoms but in November 1880 Breuer a friend of the family began to treat her He encouraged her sometimes under light hypnosis to narrate stories which led to partial improvement of the clinical picture although her overall condition continued to deteriorate According to Breuer the slow and laborious progress of her remembering work in which she recalled individual symptoms after they had occurred thus dissolving them came to a conclusion on 7 June 1882 after she had reconstructed the first night of hallucinations in Ischl She has fully recovered since that time were the words with which Breuer concluded his case report 13 Accounts differ on the success of Pappenheim s treatment by Breuer She did not speak about this episode in her later life and vehemently opposed any attempts at psychoanalytic treatment of people in her care 14 Breuer was not quick to publish about this case Subsequent research has suggested Pappenheim may have had one of a number of neurological illnesses This includes temporal lobe epilepsy 15 16 17 tuberculous meningitis 18 and encephalitis 17 Whatever the nature of her condition she went on to run an orphanage and then found and lead the Judischer Frauenbund for twenty years The term psychoneurosis was coined by Scottish psychiatrist Thomas Clouston for his 1883 book Clinical Lectures on Mental Diseases 19 He describes a condition that covers what is today considered the schizophrenia and autism spectrums a combination of symptoms that would soon become better known as dementia praecox French neurologist Jean Martin Charcot came to believe that psychological trauma was a cause of some cases of hysteria He wrote in his book Lecons sur les maladies du systeme nerveux 1885 1887 and published in English as Clinical Lectures on the Diseases of the Nervous System 20 Quite recently male hysteria has been studied by Messrs Putnam 1884 and Walton 1883 21 in America principally as it occurs after injuries and especially after railway accidents They have recognised like Mr Page 1885 who in England has also paid attention to this subject that many of those nervous accidents described under the name of Railway spine and which according to them would be better described as Railway brain are in fact whether occurring in man or woman simply manifestations of hysteria 20 Charcot documented around two dozen cases where psychological trauma appears to have caused hysteria 22 In some cases the results are described like the modern concept of PTSD 22 Austrian psychiatrist Sigmund Freud was a student of Charcot in 1885 6 23 In 1893 Freud credited Charcot with being the source of all the modern advances made in the understanding and knowledge of hysteria 24 French psychiatrist Pierre Janet released his book L automatisme psychologique Psychological automatism in 1889 its third chapter detailing his understanding of hypnosis and the unconscious At this time he claimed that the main aspect of psychological trauma is dissociation a disconnection of the conscious mind from reality 25 Freud would later claim Janet as a major influence 26 In 1891 Thomas Clouston published Neuroses of Development 27 which covered a wide range of physical and mental developmental conditions Breuer came to mentor Freud The pair released the paper Ueber den psychischen Mechanismus hysterischer Phanomene Vorlaufige Mittheilung known in English as On the physical mechanism of hysterical phenomena preliminary communication in January 1893 It opens with nbsp Sigmund Freud established psychoanalysis as the dominant treatment for many mental conditions A chance observation has led us over a number of years to investigate a great variety of different forms and symptoms of hysteria with a view to discovering their precipitating cause the event which provoked the first occurrence often many years earlier of the phenomenon in question In the great majority of cases it is not possible to establish the point of origin by a simple interrogation of the patient however thoroughly it may be carried out This is in part because what is in question is often some experience which the patient dislikes discussing but principally because he is genuinely unable to recollect it and often has no suspicion of the causal connection between the precipitating event and the pathological phenomenon As a rule it is necessary to hypnotize the patient and to arouse his memories under hypnosis of the time at which the symptom made its first appearance when this has been done it becomes possible to demonstrate the connection in the clearest and most convincing fashion It is of course obvious that in cases of traumatic hysteria what provokes the symptoms is the accident The causal connection is equally evident in hysterical attacks when it is possible to gather from the patient s utterances that in each attack he is hallucinating the same event which provoked the first one The situation is more obscure in the case of other phenomena Our experiences have shown us however that the most various symptoms which are ostensibly spontaneous and as one might say idiopathic products of hysteria are just as strictly related to the precipitating trauma as the phenomena to which we have just alluded and which exhibit the connection quite clearly 28 This paper was reprinted and supplemented with case studies in the pair s 1895 book Studien uber Hysterie Studies on Hysteria Of the book s five case studies the most famous became that of Breuer s patient Bertha Pappenheim given the pseudonym Anna O This book established the field of psychoanalysis French neurologist Paul Oulmont was mentored by Charcot In his 1894 book Therapeutique des nevroses Therapy of neuroses he lists the neuroses as being hysteria neurasthenia exophthalmic goitre epilepsy migraine Sydenham s chorea Parkinson s disease and tetany 29 The fifth edition of German psychiatrist Emil Kraepelin s popular psychiatry textbook in 1896 gave neuroses a well accepted definition 2 In the following presentation we want to summarize a group of disease states as general neuroses which are accompanied by more or less pronounced nervous dysfunctions What is common to these manifestations of insanity is that we are constantly dealing with the morbid processing of vital stimuli what they also have in common is the occurrence of more transitory peculiar manifestations of illness sometimes in the physical sometimes in the psychic area These attacks of fluctuations in mental balance are therefore not independent illnesses but only the occasional increase in a persistent illness It seems useful to me for the time being to distinguish between two main forms of general neuroses epileptic and hysterical insanity 30 Pierre Janet published the two volume work Nevroses et Idees Fixes Neuroses and Fixations in 1898 31 32 According to Janet neuroses could be usefully divided into hysterias and psychasthenias Hysterias induced such symptoms as anaesthesia visual field narrowing paralyses and unconscious acts 33 Psychasthenias involved the ability to adjust to one s surroundings similar to the later concepts of adjustment disorder and executive functions Janet founded the French Societe de psychologie 34 in 1901 This later became the Societe francaise de psychologie and continues today as France s main psychology body 35 Barbiturate is a class of highly addictive sedative drugs The first barbiturate barbital was synthesized in 1902 by German chemists Emil Fischer and Joseph von Mering and was first marketed as Veronal in 1904 36 Later on the similar barbiturate phenobarbital was brought to market in 1912 under the name Luminal After that Barbiturate became a popular drug in many countries to reduce neurotic anxiety and displaced the use of bromides Janet published the book Les Obsessions et la Psychasthenie The Obsessions and the Psychasthenias in 1903 31 Janet followed this with the books The Major Symptoms of Hysteria in 1907 37 and Les Nevroses The Neuroses in 1909 31 Janet also co founded the Journal de psychologie normale et pathologique Journal of Normal and Pathological Psychology in 1903 35 According to Janet one cause of neurosis is when the mental force of a traumatic event is stronger than what someone can counter using their normal coping mechanisms 38 Meanwhile Freud developed a number of different theories of neurosis The most impactful one was that it referred to mental disorders caused by the brain s defence against past psychological trauma 39 This redefined the general understanding and use of the word It came to replace the concept of hysteria He held the First Congress for Freudian Psychology in Salzburg in April 1908 Subsequent Congresses continue today Progressive muscle relaxation PMR was first developed by American psychiatrist and physiologist Edmund Jacobson 40 This began at Harvard University in 1908 40 PMR involves learning to relieve the tension in specific muscle groups by first tensing and then relaxing each muscle group 41 When the muscle tension is released attention is directed towards the differences felt during tension and relaxation so that the patient learns to recognize the contrast between the states 42 43 This reduces anxiety and the effect of phobias 44 Freud published the detailed case study Bemerkungen uber einen Fall von Zwangsneurose Notes Upon a Case of Obsessional Neurosis in 1909 documenting his treatment of Rat Man Freud established the International Psychoanalytical Association IPA in March 1910 He arranged for Carl Jung to be its first president This organisation chose to only provide both psychoanalytic training and recognition to medical doctors The American Psychoanalytic Association was founded in 1911 45 by Welsh neurologist Ernest Jones with the support of Freud It followed the IPA s practice of only supporting psychoanalysis provided by medical doctors Jung gave a speech explaining his understanding of Freud s work called Psychoanalysis and Neurosis in New York in 1912 It was published in 1916 46 The journal Internationale Zeitschrift fur Psychoanalyse was established in 1913 and continued until 1941 The battlefield stresses of World War I 1914 18 lead to many cases of strong short term psychological symptoms known today as combat stress reaction CSR Other terms for the condition include combat fatigue battle fatigue battle neurosis shell shock and operational stress reaction The general psychological term acute stress disorder was first used for this condition at this time citation needed The fight or flight response was first described by American physiologist Walter Bradford Cannon in 1915 47 American military psychiatrist Thomas W Salmon the chief consultant in psychiatry in the American Expeditionary Force 48 released the book The care and treatment of mental diseases and war neuroses shell shock in the British army in 1917 49 dealing primarily with what was considered was the best treatment for hysteria His recommendations were broadly adopted in the US armed forces Freud s most explanatory work on neurosis was his lectures later grouped together as General Theory of the Neuroses 1916 17 forming part 3 of the book Vorlesungen zur Einfuhrung in die Psychoanalyse 1917 later published in English as A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis 1920 50 In that work Freud noted that The meaning of neurotic symptoms was first discovered by J Breuer in the study and felicitous cure of a case of hysteria which has since become famous 1880 82 It is true that P Janet independently reached the same result The neurotic symptom develops as a substitution for something else that has remained suppressed Certain psychological experiences should normally have become so far elaborated that consciousness would have attained knowledge of them This did not take place however but out of these interrupted and disturbed processes imprisoned in the unconscious the symptom arose Our therapy does its work by means of changing the unconscious into the conscious and is effective only in so far as it has the opportunity of bringing about this transformation 50 Freud added to this with his paper Aus der Geschichte einer infantilen Neurose From the History of an Infantile Neurosis published in 1918 which is a detailed case study of Freud s treatment of the Wolfman The International Journal of Psychoanalysis was founded by Ernest Jones in 1920 In response to stress injuries from World War I the British government produced the Report of the War Office Committee of Inquiry into Shell Shock which was published in 1922 Its recommended course of treatment included While recognizing that each individual case of war neurosis must be treated on its merits the Committee are of opinion that good results will be obtained in the majority by the simplest forms of psycho therapy i e explanation persuasion and suggestion aided by such physical methods as baths electricity and massage Rest of mind and body is essential in all cases The committee are of opinion that the production of deep hypnotic sleep while beneficial as a means of conveying suggestions or eliciting forgotten experiences are useful in selected cases but in the majority they are unnecessary and may even aggravate the symptoms for a time They do not recommend psycho analysis in the Freudian sense In the state of convalescence re education and suitable occupation of an interesting nature are of great importance If the patient is unfit for further military service it is considered that every endeavor should be made to obtain for him suitable employment on his return to active life The common neuroses and their treatment by psychotherapy was a book released by British psychiatrist Thomas Arthur Ross 51 in 1923 to instruct medical doctors in general 52 A second edition was published in 1937 which was subsequently reprinted many times He believed that most neuroses can successfully treated by general practitioners without the need to use Freudian analysis He thought that method was only necessary for the most difficult cases Ross would later write the books Introduction to analytical psychotherapy 1932 and An enquiry into prognosis in the neuroses 1936 In April 1923 Freud published his monograph Das Ich und das Es published in English as The Ego and the Id 53 which included a revised theory of mental functioning now considering that repression was only one of many defence mechanisms and that it occurred to reduce anxiety Hence Freud characterised repression as both a cause and a result of anxiety citation needed Austrian literary theorist Otto Rank was a close ally of Freud His book The Trauma of Birth 1924 focused more on people s choices rather than Freud s focus on drives He believed in the idea of psychotherapy as opposed to psychoanalysis that understanding someone s neuroses wasn t sufficient for effective therapy citation needed Freud released his book Hemmung Symptom und Angst Inhibition Symptom and Anxiety in 1926 in reaction to Rank s book 54 It detailed his further developed understanding of neurosis and anxiety The book was published in English as The Problem of Anxiety in 1936 This book expressed his new view that anxiety created repression rather than the other way around 55 Freud also published the book Die Frage der Laienanalyse The Question of Lay Analysis in 1926 in which he endorsed non doctors performing psychoanalysis In 1929 Austrian psychiatrist Alfred Adler published the book Problems of Neurosis A Book of Case Histories furthering the school of individual psychology he had established in 1912 1929 also saw Edmund Jacobson publishing of the professional instruction book Progressive Relaxation 56 It explained the benefits of relaxation for addressing neuroses and other mental conditions 57 He followed this with the more publicly oriented You Must Relax 58 in 1934 Walter Bradford Cannon s 1932 book The Wisdom of the Body 59 popularised the concept of fight or flight The American Medical Association released its Standard Classified Nomenclature of Diseases in 1933 the first widely accepted such nomenclature in the United States By the second edition of 1935 its category of psychoneuroses included Hysteria Anxiety hysteria Conversion hysteria Anesthenic type Paralytic type Hyperkinetic type Paresthetic type Autonomic type Amnesic type Mixed hysterical psychoneurosis Psychasthenia or compulsive states Obsession Compulsive tics or spasms Phobia Mixed compulsive states Neurasthenia Hypochondriasis Reactive depression Anxiety state Mixed psychoneurosis 60 nbsp Hans Seyle devised the general adaptation syndrome to describe stress The general adaptation syndrome GAS theory of stress was developed by Austro Hungarian physiologist Hans Selye in 1936 61 In 1937 Austrian American psychiatrist Adolph Stern proposed that there were many people with conditions that fitted between the definitions of psychoneurosis and psychosis and called them the border line group of neuroses 62 This group would later become known as borderline personality disorder By 1937 the concept of occupational neuroses was known by many American health practitioners It referred to neuroses caused by any aspect of someone s employment 63 1939 1952 edit Followers of Freud s psychoanalytic thinking such as Carl Jung Karen Horney and Jacques Lacan continued to discuss the concept of neurosis after Freud s death in 1939 The term continues to be used in the Freudian sense in psychology and philosophy 64 65 By 1939 some 120 000 British ex servicemen had received final awards for primary psychiatric disability or were still drawing pensions about 15 of all pensioned disabilities and another 44 000 or so were getting pensions for soldier s heart or effort syndrome British historian Ben Shephard notes There is though much that statistics do not show because in terms of psychiatric effects pensioners were just the tip of a huge iceberg 66 Approximately 20 of U S troops displayed symptoms of combat stress reaction during WWII 1939 1945 It was assumed to be a temporary response of healthy individuals to witnessing or experiencing traumatic events Symptoms included depression anxiety withdrawal confusion paranoia and sympathetic hyperactivity 67 Thomas W Salmon s battle neurosis principles were adopted by the U S forces during this conflict 68 The American Journal of Psychoanalysis was founded by Karen Horney in 1941 69 1942 saw American psychologist Carl Rogers publish the handbook Counseling and Psychotherapy which established his school of person centered therapy Austrian psychiatrist Otto Fenichel s encyclopaedic textbook The psychoanalytic theory of neurosis 1945 set the post war Freudian orthodoxy on the subject It has been heavily cited by academic papers in the years since nbsp Karen Horney developed the psychoanalytic understanding of neurosis through a series of books and by establishing a journal Karen Horney s Our Inner Conflicts A Constructive Theory of Neurosis 1945 was a popular book on the topic The post World War II boom in the number of patient treating psychologists in the United States led to a major restructure of the American Psychological Association in 1945 Carol Rogers became its president in 1947 70 Austrian psychiatrist Viktor Frankl s best selling book Man s Search for Meaning 1946 launched the psychotherapy school of logotherapy For his 1947 book Dimensions of Personality German British psychologist Hans Eysenck created the term neuroticism to refer to someone whose constitution may leave them liable to break down emotionally with the slightest provocation 71 The book outlines a two factor theory of personality with neuroticism as one of those two factors This book would be greatly influential on future personality theory Karen Horney s Neurosis and Human Growth 1950 further expanded the understanding of neuroses French Swiss psychologist Germaine Guex s 1950 book La nevrose d abandon proposed the existence of the condition of abandonment neurosis It also detailed all the forms of treatment Geux had found effective in treating it It was published in English as The Abandonment Neurosis in 2015 72 In October 1951 the now highly influential Carl Rogers presented a paper in which he described the relationship between neurosis and his understanding of effective therapy He wrote The emotionally maladjusted person the neurotic is in difficulty first because communication within himself has broken down and second because as a result of this his communication with others has been damaged If this sounds somewhat strange then let me put it in other terms In the neurotic individual parts of himself which have been termed unconscious or repressed or denied to awareness become blocked off so that they no longer communicate themselves to the conscious or managing part of himself The task of psychotherapy is to help the person achieve through a special relationship with the therapist good communication within himself 73 The North American Society of Adlerian Psychology was established in 1952 74 becoming the predominant society of its cause in the world DSM I 1952 1968 edit The first edition of the American Psychiatric Association s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders DSM I in 1952 included a category named Psychoneurotic Disorders 75 Regarding the definition of this category the Manual stated Grouped as Psychoneurotic Disorders are those disturbances in which anxiety is a chief characteristic directly felt and expressed or automatically controlled by such defenses as depression conversion dissociation displacement phobia formation or repetitive thoughts and acts For this nomenclature a psychoneurotic reaction may be defined as one in which the personality in its struggle for adjustment to internal and external stresses utilizes the mechanisms listed above to handle the anxiety created The qualifying phrase x 2 with neurotic reaction may be used to amplify the diagnosis when in the presence of another psychiatric disturbance a symptomatic clinical picture appears which might be diagnosed under Psychoneurotic Disorders in this nomenclature A specific example may be seen in an episode of acute anxiety occurring in a homosexual 75 Conditions in the category included Anxiety reaction Dissociative reaction Conversion reaction Phobic reaction Obsessive compulsive reaction Depressive reaction Psychoneurotic reaction other 75 The DSM I also included a category of transient situational personality disorders This included the diagnosis of gross stress reaction 76 This was defined as a normal personality using established patterns of reaction to deal with overwhelming fear as a response to conditions of great stress 77 The diagnosis included language which relates the condition to combat as well as to civilian catastrophe 77 The other situational disorders were adult situational reaction and a variety of time of life delineated adjustment reactions These referred to short term reactions to stressors Monoamine oxidase inhibitors MAOIs and tricyclic antidepressants TCAs were developed for the treatment of neurosis and other conditions from the early 1950s Because of their undesirable adverse effect profile and high potential for toxicity their use was limited 78 79 The use of modern exposure therapy for neuroses began in the 1950s in South Africa 80 South African American Joseph Wolpe was one of the first psychiatrists to spark interest in treating psychiatric problems as behavioral issues In May 1950 pharmacologist Frank Berger Czech American and chemist Bernard John Ludwig engineered meprobamate to be a non drowsy tranquiliser 81 Launched as Miltown in 1955 it rapidly became the first blockbuster psychotropic drug in American history becoming popular in Hollywood and gaining fame for its effects 82 It is highly addictive The Meaning of Anxiety was a book released by American psychiatrist Rollo May in 1950 83 It reviewed the existing research on the subject It found that some anxiety was a simple reaction to related stimuli while other anxiety had a more complicated and neurotic beginning A revised edition of the book was published in 1977 After the Korean War 1950 1953 Thomas W Salmon s battle neurosis treatment practices became summarised as the PIE principles 84 Proximity treat the casualties close to the front and within sound of the fighting Immediacy treat them without delay and not wait until the wounded were all dealt with Expectancy ensure that everyone had the expectation of their return to the front after a rest and replenishment The Taylor Manifest Anxiety Scale was created by American psychologist Janet Taylor in 1953 It measures anxiousness as a personality trait The International Association of Analytical Psychology was founded in 1955 It is the predominant organisation devoted to the psychology of Carl Jung The American Academy of Psychoanalysis was founded in 1956 for psychiatrists to discuss psychoanalysis in ways that deviated from the orthodoxy of the time Also in 1956 American psychologist Albert Ellis published his first paper on his methodology rational psychotherapy This and later works defined what is now known as rational emotive behavior therapy REBT Ellis believed that people s erroneous beliefs about their adversities was a major cause of neurosis and his therapy aimed to dissolve these neuroses by correcting people s understandings Ellis published the first REBT book How to live with a neurotic in 1957 Ellis therapy was also the beginning of what is now called cognitive behavioral therapy CBT Albert Ellis and others founded The Institute for Rational Living in April 1959 which later became the Albert Ellis Institute 85 The concept of institutional neurosis was coined by British psychiatrist Russell Barton 86 and explained in his well cited 1959 book Institutional Neurosis 87 Barton believed that many of the mental health symptoms had by people living in mental hospitals and similar institutions were caused by being in those environments rather than other causes Barton was a leader in the deinstitutionalisation movement This form of neurosis later came to be known as institutional syndrome Benzodiazepine is a class of highly addictive sedative drugs that reduce anxiety by depressing function in certain parts of the brain The first of these drugs chlordiazepoxide Librium was made available for sale in 1960 It was discovered by Polish American chemist Leo Sternbach in 1955 Librium was followed with the more popular diazepam Valium in 1963 88 These drugs soon displaced Miltown 89 90 Spanish history writer Jose M Lopez Pinero published Origenes historicos del concepto de neurosis in 1963 91 It was published in English as Historical Origins of the Concept of Neurosis in 1983 92 Neurotics Anonymous began in February 1964 as a twelve step program to help the neurotic It was founded in Washington D C by American psychologist Grover Boydston 93 94 and has since spread through the Americas Also in 1964 Polish psychiatrist Kazimierz Dabrowski released his book Positive Disintegration 95 The book argues that developing and resolving psychoneurosis is a necessary part of healthy personality development The year 1964 also saw the establishment of the American Psychological Association s Division 25 a group of psychologists interested in behaviourism 96 The popular textbook The causes and cures of neurosis an introduction to modern behaviour therapy based on learning theory and the principles of conditioning was published in 1965 by Hans Eysenck and South African British psychologist Stanley Rachman 97 It aimed to replace the Freudian approach to neurosis with behaviorism The Hopkins Symptom Checklist HSCL is a self report symptom inventory that was developed in the mid 1960s from earlier checklists It measures somatization obsession compulsion interpersonal sensitivity anxiety and depression 98 In 1966 psychologists began to observe large numbers of children of Holocaust survivors seeking mental help in clinics in Canada The grandchildren of Holocaust survivors were overrepresented by 300 among the referrals to psychiatry clinics in comparison with their representation in the general population 99 Further study lead to the better understanding of transgenerational trauma The noted book Psychological stress and the coping process was released by American psychologist Richard Lazarus in 1966 The well cited book Anxiety and Behaviour was also released in 1966 As with Eysenck and Rachman s book it aimed to connect neuroses with behaviourism It was edited by American psychologist Charles Spielberger The Association for Advancement of Behavioral Therapies was founded in 1966 In 2005 it became the Association for Behavioral and Cognitive Therapies DSM II 1968 1980 editAfter Freudian thinking became less prominent in psychology the term neurosis came to be used as a near synonym for anxiety The second edition of the DSM DSM II in 1968 described neuroses thusly Anxiety is the chief characteristic of the neuroses It may be felt and expressed directly or it may be controlled unconsciously and automatically by conversion into physical symptoms displacement into mental symptoms and various other psychological mechanisms Generally these mechanisms produce symptoms experienced as subjective distress from which the patient desires relief The neuroses as contrasted to the psychoses manifest neither gross distortion or misinterpretation of external reality nor gross personality disorganization Included in this category were the conditions Hysterical neurosis Hysterical neurosis conversion type Hysterical neurosis dissociative type Phobic neurosis Obsessive compulsive neurosis Depressive neurosis Neurasthenic neurosis neurasthenia Depersonalization neurosis depersonalization syndrome Hypochondriacal neurosis Other neurosis Unspecified neurosisWhat was previously gross stress reaction and adult situational reaction was combined into the new adjustment disorder of adult life a condition covering mild to strong reactions 100 Other adjustment disorders for other times of life were also included Also the category transient situational personality disorders was renamed transient situational disturbances Anxiety and Neurosis was a popular mass market book released in 1968 by British psychologist Charles Rycroft 101 Neuroses and Personality Disorders was a popular textbook released by American psychologist Elton B McNeil 102 in 1970 103 The State Trait Anxiety Inventory STAI was developed by Charles Spielberger and others and first published in 1970 It provides separate state and trait measures of a person s anxiety A revised form was released in 1983 104 The book Primal Scream Primal Therapy The Cure for Neurosis by American psychologist Arthur Janov was released in 1970 It established primal therapy as a treatment for neurosis It is based on the idea that neurosis is caused by the repressed pain of childhood trauma Janov argued that repressed pain can be sequentially brought to conscious awareness for resolution through re experiencing specific incidents and fully expressing the resulting pain during therapy Janov criticizes the talking therapies as they deal primarily with the cerebral cortex and higher reasoning areas and do not access the source of Pain within the more basic parts of the central nervous system 105 A second edition of the book was published in 1999 Chinese American psychiatrist William WK Zung 106 released his Anxiety Status Inventory ASI and patient Self rating Anxiety Scale SAS in November 1971 107 Dabrowski expanded on his earlier book with Psychoneurosis Is Not An Illness Neuroses And Psychoneuroses From The Perspective Of Positive Disintegration in 1972 Anxiety Current Trends in Theory and Research is a well cited series of two books released in 1972 and were edited by Charles Spielberger American anthropologist Ernst Becker in his Pulitzer winning book The Denial of Death 1973 argued that the repression of the fear of death had a number of advantages and that this was a major source of neurosis The first tetracyclic anti depressant TeCA maprotiline Ludiomil was developed by Ciba 108 and patented in 1966 108 It was introduced for medical use in 1974 108 109 TeCAs mianserin Tolvon and amoxapine Asendin followed shortly thereafter and mirtazapine Remeron being introduced later on 108 109 nbsp Aaron Beck advanced cognitive behavioral therapy and developed a cognitive theory of depression Albert Ellis work was expanded on by fellow American psychiatrist Aaron Beck In 1975 Beck released the greatly influential book Cognitive Therapy and the Emotional Disorders Beck s cognitive therapy became popular soon becoming the most popular form of CBT and often being known by that name American psychologist Martin Seligman released his highly cited book Helplessness On Depression Development and Death in 1975 Also in 1975 Americans the nurse Ann Burgess and sociologist Lynda Lytle Holmstrom 110 defined rape trauma syndrome in order to draw attention to the striking similarities between the experiences of soldiers returning from war and of rape victims 111 Beta blockers are a class of medication that block the receptor sites for epinephrine adrenaline and norepinephrine noradrenaline on beta receptors of the sympathetic nervous system which mediates the fight or flight response 112 113 By the mid 1970s beta blockers were used to reduce symptoms of anxiety Scottish pharmacologist James Black had synthesized the first clinically significant beta blockers propranolol and pronethalol in 1964 114 In 1977 benzodiazepines had become the most prescribed medications globally 115 116 That was the year the highly addictive benzodiazepine lorazepam Ativan entered the US market having earlier been invented by American chemist Stanley C Bell in 1963 117 118 119 American psychiatrist and historian Kenneth Levin s Freud s early psychology of the neuroses a historical perspective was published in 1978 The well cited book Cognitive therapy of depression was written by Aaron Beck American psychiatrist A John Rush Canadian psychologist Brian F Shaw 120 and American psychologist Gary Emery 121 It was released in 1979 It launched the Beck s cognitive triad explanation of depression and lead to CBT becoming the main talking therapy used to treat depression In 1979 American biologist Jon Kabat Zinn founded the Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction MBSR program at the University of Massachusetts to treat the chronically ill web 1 This program sparked the application of mindfulness ideas and practices in western medicine 122 American Israeli medical sociologist Aaron Antonovsky in his 1979 book Stress Health and Coping stated that an event will not be perceived as stressful when it is appraised as consistent under some personal control of the outcome and balanced between underload and overload Someone resistant to stress will see potential stressors as instead being meaningful predictable and ordered 123 Antonovsky proposed that stress and a lack of an individual s resistance resources to stressors may be the main underlying causes of illness and disease not just mental neuroses This book established the field of salutogenesis In January 1980 Stanley Rachman published a well cited working definition of emotional processing 124 aiming to define the certain psychological experiences Freud had mentioned in his 1923 book and had earlier referred to It included lists of things likely to improve or retard such processing DSM III 1980 1994 edit The DSM replaced its neurosis category with an anxiety disorders category in 1980 with the release of the DSM III It did this because of a decision by its editors to provide descriptions of behavior rather than descriptions of hidden psychological mechanisms 125 This change was controversial 126 This edition of the book also included a condition named post traumatic stress disorder for the first time 127 This was similar in definition to the gross stress reaction of the DSM I The anxiety disorders were defined as Phobic disorders or phobic neuroses Agoraphobia with panic attacks Agoraphobia without panic attacks Social phobia Simple phobia Anxiety states or anxiety neuroses Panic disorder Generalised anxiety disorder Obsessive compulsive disorder or obsessive compulsive neuroses Post traumatic stress disorder acute Post traumatic stress disorder chronic or delayed Atypical anxiety disorderAdjustment disorder remained and was defined separately Its time of life based subtypes were abolished replaced with combinations with co morbid syndromes such as Adjustment Disorder with Depressed Mood and Adjustment Disorder with Anxious Mood 127 Adjustment disorder returned to being a short term condition Somatoform disorders disassociation depression and hypochondria all previously considered neuroses were also treated separately Neurasthenia a neurosis that caused otherwise unexplainable fatigue was loosely mapped to a mild form of depression The American National Membership Committee on Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work was established in May 1980 128 It became the American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work in 2007 128 The Phobia Society of America was founded by psychologist Jerilyn Ross and others in December 1980 126 In 1981 American psychologists Christina Maslach and Susan E Jackson published an instrument for assessing occupational burnout the Maslach Burnout Inventory 129 The two researchers described burnout in terms of emotional exhaustion depersonalization feeling low empathy towards other people in an occupational setting and reduced feelings of work related personal accomplishment 130 131 The highly addictive benzodiazepine alprazolam Xanax was approved for medical use in the United States in 1981 132 133 having been invented by American chemist Jackson Hester in 1971 134 This and accounts of Valium addiction issues particularly that of Barbara Gordon led to the latter no longer being the most prescribed drug in the United States in 1982 89 Acceptance and commitment therapy ACT was started by American psychologist Steven C Hayes in around 1982 135 The core conception of ACT is that psychological suffering is usually caused by experiential avoidance cognitive entanglement and resulting psychological rigidity that leads to a failure to take needed behavioral steps in accord with core values ACT teaches people to just notice their unhelpful thoughts and feelings rather than reifying them mindfulness to discover their values and then commit to actions in line with those values By 1982 the US military had moved from using the PIE principles to treat wartime stress reactions and was using the similar BICEP instead This stands for Brevity Immediacy Centrality Marines or Contact Army Expectancy and Proximity Brevity was the aim to treat combatants for only 1 to 4 days Centrality refers to the centralised location of treatment Contact meant a continued contact with their unit and chain of command The Soldier must be encouraged to continue to think of himself as a warfighter rather than a patient or a sick person 136 The concept of motivational interviewing was first published about in April 1983 by its originator the American psychologist William Richard Miller 137 It is a form of talking treatment that focuses on motivating the patient to do what they believe they need to do The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale was released in June 1983 138 in a well cited paper by British psychiatrists Anthony S Zigmond and R Phillip Snaith 139 The Perceived Stress Scale originates from December 1983 140 when it was detailed in a paper by American psychologists Sheldon Cohen Tom Kamarck 141 and Robin Mermelstein 142 American psychiatrist George F Drinka released the history book Birth of Neurosis Myth Malady and the Victorians in 1984 143 In the 1984 book Stress Appraisal and Coping American psychologists Richard Lazarus and Susan Folkman suggested that stress can be thought of as resulting from an imbalance between demands and resources or as occurring when pressure exceeds one s perceived ability to cope 144 They developed the transactional model of stress The book is the 17th most cited book in social science 145 146 The Society for Traumatic Stress Studies STSS was founded in the United States in March 1985 for professionals to share information about the effects of trauma It later became the International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies ISTSS Stress inoculation training was developed to reduce anxiety in doctors during times of intense stress by American doctor Donald Meichenbaum in 1985 147 1985 also saw the publishing of the well cited Anxiety Disorders and Phobias A Cognitive Perspective by Aaron Beck and others It described how CBT could be used to successfully treat conditions that weren t depression nbsp Edna Foa co developed prolonged exposure therapy In 1986 emotional processing theory was first presented by psychologists Edna Foa Israeli American and Michael J Kozak 39 American 148 65 64 This led to their development of prolonged exposure therapy for PTSD It is characterized by two main treatment procedures Imaginal exposure is repeated purposeful retelling of the trauma memory In vivo exposure is gradually confronting situations places and things that are reminders of the trauma or feel dangerous despite being objectively safe The first selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor SSRI medication went on the market in Belgium in 1986 They became available in the United States in 1988 and in other places around this time This class of drugs largely replaced MOAIs and TCAs as they were much safer In the United States these drugs are most commonly known as Prozac Zoloft Paxil Luvox Celexa and Lexapro The first SSRI was developed by chemists including the Scottish American Bryan Molloy and Chinese American David T Wong The SSRIs were soon supplemented with the similar SNRI class which includes Effexor Antidepressant discontinuation syndrome is a significant issue with the use of both classes Azapirones are a group of drugs that work at the 5 HT1A serotonin receptor and are used to reduce anxiety The first available azapirone buspirone Buspar was approved in the United States in 1986 It was invented by a team at Mead Johnson in the US in 1968 The only other drug in this class that is widely used in tandospirone Sediel which is available in some Asian countries Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing EMDR is a form of exposure therapy devised by American psychologist Francine Shapiro from 1987 with the first papers on it published in 1989 149 It involves focusing on traumatic memories while engaging in side to side eye movements or other similar distractions The technique became more broadly known after the release of Shapiro s book Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing Basic Principles Protocols and Procedures in 2001 In well cited paper Psychosocial resilience and protective mechanisms British psychiatrist Michael Rutter in July 1987 found that resilience could be improved in an individual by the 1 reduction of risk impact 2 reduction of negative chain reactions 3 establishment and maintenance of self esteem and self efficacy and 4 opening up of opportunities 150 Cognitive processing therapy CPT was developed by American psychologist Patricia Resick from 1988 The primary focus of the treatment is to help the client understand and reconceptualize their traumatic event in a way that reduces its ongoing negative effects on their current life Decreasing avoidance of the trauma is crucial to this since it is necessary for the client to examine and evaluate their meta emotions and beliefs generated by the trauma citation needed In 1988 the First European Conference on Traumatic Stress Studies was held in Lincoln with the participation of the STSS The European Trauma Network was formed at this time This became the European Society for Traumatic Stress Studies ESTSS in 1993 151 The highly cited book Anxiety and its Disorders is a wide ranging review of the subject released by American psychologist David H Barlow in 1988 A second edition was published in 2002 The Penn State Worry Questionnaire was developed in 1988 by American psychologists Thomas D Borkovec and Andrew M Mathews 152 A subsequent validation of it has been highly cited 152 The Beck Anxiety Inventory was first released in December 1988 by Aaron Beck and others 153 154 The conservation of resources COR theory of stress was proposed by American psychologist Stevan Hobfoll 155 in March 1989 It is a heavily cited theory that describes the motivation that drives humans to both maintain their current resources and to pursue new resources 156 The well cited paper Childhood trauma in borderline personality disorder was released in April 1989 positing a strong association between a diagnosis of borderline personality disorder and a history of abuse in childhood 157 It was authored by psychiatrists Judith Lewis Herman American John Christopher Perry Canadian and Bessel van der Kolk Dutch American The world s main psychoanalysis bodies decided to admit people who were not medical doctors in 1989 after a major lawsuit was made against them 158 In 1990 the Phobia Society of America became the Anxiety Disorders Association of America 159 The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook was first released in August 1990 It has since sold over a million copies and had seven editions It was written by American philosopher and behavioural scientist Edmund J Bourne 160 The International Karen Horney Society was founded in 1991 161 The highly cited August 1991 book Motivational Interviewing by William Richard Miller and South African British psychologist Stephen Rollnick greatly developed and promoted its subject Further editions were released in 2002 and 2012 After decades of development the American psychologist Marsha M Linehan published a defining paper for a new treatment for borderline personality disorder called dialectical behavior therapy DBT in December 1991 162 This has come to be used to treat emotional dysregulation more broadly The World Association of Psychoanalysis was founded in January 1992 and became the largest organisation devoted to the psychotherapy of Jacques Lacan The first World Conference on Traumatic Stress was held in Amsterdam in June 1992 organised by the ISTSS 151 The well cited book Anxiety A cognitive perspective was released by British psychologist Michael Eysenck in 1992 Judith Lewis Herman s 1992 book Trauma and Recovery proposed that there is an important difference between single incident traumas Type I traumas and complex or repeated traumas Type II 163 The sustained negative effect of the latter was later recognised as complex post traumatic stress disorder CPTSD by the ICD 11 A second edition of the book was published in 1997 The well cited paper Lifetime and 12 Month Prevalence of DSM III R Psychiatric Disorders in the United States Results From the National Comorbidity Survey was released by American sociologist Ronald C Kessler and seven others in January 1994 164 DSM IV 1994 2013 edit The conditions acute stress reaction and acute stress disorder were added to the DSM IV 1994 describing what had previously been considered some types of adjustment disorder Acute stress reaction referred to the symptoms experienced immediately to 48 hours after exposure to a traumatic event Acute stress disorder was defined by symptoms experienced 48 hours to one month following the event Symptoms experienced for longer than one month were considered to be PTSD 67 The anxiety disorders were Panic attack Agoraphobia Panic disorder without agoraphobia Panic disorder with agoraphobia Agoraphobia without history of panic disorder Specific phobia formerly simple phobia Social phobia social anxiety disorder Obsessive compulsive disorder Posttraumatic stress disorder Acute stress disorder Generalised anxiety disorder includes overanxious disorder of childhood Anxiety disorder due to a general medical condition Substance induced anxiety disorder Anxiety disorder not otherwise specified Adjustment disorder remained in the DSM and was largely unchanged The Anxiety Disorders Association of Victoria was established in Melbourne in 1994 165 Trauma focused cognitive behavioral therapy TF CBT was developed by American psychiatrists Anthony Mannarino 166 Judith Cohen 167 and Esther Deblinger 168 in the mid 1990s to help children and adolescents with PTSD There are 3 treatment phases stabilization trauma narration and processing and integration and consolidation The Depression Anxiety Stress Scales 169 DASS were developed by Australian father and son psychologists Syd H Lovibond 170 and Peter F Lovibond 171 and first made public in 1995 172 The scales are a self report instrument designed to measure depression anxiety and stress and have become one of the most widely used for these purposes Both the 42 and 21 question versions were the subject of a highly cited review in 1998 173 They have been found to correlate highly with Beck s depression and anxiety scales Australia s National Centre for War Related PTSD was founded in 1995 In 2000 it broadened its focus to include all post traumatic mental health and become Phoenix Australia Centre for Posttraumatic Mental Health in 2015 174 Posttraumatic stress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey is a highly cited paper published in December 1995 by Ronald C Kessler and others 175 The popular book Traumatic Stress The Effects of Overwhelming Experience on Mind Body and Society was edited by Bessel van der Kolk Australian psychiatrist Alexander C McFarlane 176 and Norwegian psychiatrist Lars Weisaeth It was released in 1996 The dual representation theory DRT of PTSD was developed by British psychologists Chris Brewin 177 Tim Dalgleish 178 and Stephen Joseph 179 in July 1996 180 It proposes that certain symptoms of PTSD such as nightmares flashbacks and emotional disturbance may be attributed to memory processes that occur after exposure to a traumatic event DRT proposes the existence of two separate memory systems that run in parallel during memory formation the verbally accessible memory system VAM and situationally accessible memory system SAM 181 The World Association for Person Centered amp Experiential Psychotherapy amp Counseling WAPCEPC was established in July 1996 182 furthering the work of Carl Rogers The Deutschsprachige Gesellschaft fur Psychotraumatologie 183 German speaking Society for Psychotraumatology was established in 1998 It was co founded by German psychologist Andreas Maercker Trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder in the community the 1996 Detroit Area Survey of Trauma was a highly cited paper published in July 1998 by Israeli American sociologist Naomi Breslau Ronald C Kessler and others 184 Self Efficacy The Exercise of Control is an extremely well cited book published by Canadian American psychologist Albert Bandura in February 1997 It describes the power of a person s belief in their ability to achieve their goals dubbed self efficacy and the effect of this on anxiety phobias depression and other things Edna Foa and EA Meadows published the well cited paper Psychosocial Treatments for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder A Critical Review in February 1997 185 It examined CBT EMDR and stress inoculation training and treatment programs that combined these Foa s Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale was first published in December 1997 in a well cited paper 186 The development of anxiety The role of control in the early environment 187 is a well cited paper from July 1998 by American psychologists Bruce Chorpita and David H Barlow It posited that people who feel a lack of control of their lives as a child are often anxious as adults Bestselling book Change Your Brain Change Your Life The Breakthrough Program for Conquering Anxiety Depression Obsessiveness Anger and Impulsiveness was released by American psychiatrist Daniel G Amen in December 1998 The well cited book Acceptance and Commitment Therapy An Experimental Approach to Behaviour Change was published by American psychologists Steven C Hayes Kirk Stroshal 188 and Kelly G Wilson 189 in 1999 This greatly publicised ACT A second edition of the book was published in 2016 Anxiety Canada was established in 1999 190 In April 2000 the paper A cognitive model of posttraumatic stress disorder was published by psychologists Anke Ehlers German British and David M Clark British 191 They and others followed this with a publishing of a treatment method based on this model in 2005 192 The three components of this are to modify negative appraisals of the trauma reduce re experiencing symptoms by discussing trauma memories and learning how to differentiate between types of trauma triggers and reduce behaviors and thoughts that contribute to the maintenance of the sense of current threat The highly cited paper Posttraumatic stress disorder the burden to the individual and to society was published by Ronald C Kessler in May 2000 193 The job demands resources model JD R model of stress was first described in June 2001 by psychologists Evangelia Demerouti 194 Greek Arnold Bakker Dutch and others It suggests strain is a response to imbalance between demands on the individual and the resources they have to deal with those demands 195 196 The 9 question Patient Health Questionnaire PHQ 9 is a diagnostic tool introduced in 2001 to screen adult patients in a primary care setting for the presence and severity of depression 197 198 199 The PHQ 9 takes less than 3 minutes to complete and simply scores each of the 9 DSM IV criteria for depression based on the mood module from the original PRIME MD 200 Primary care providers frequently use the PHQ 9 to screen for depression in patients The well cited paper Fears phobias and preparedness Toward an evolved module of fear and fear learning 201 was published in July 2001 It was authored by psychologists Arne Ohman Swedish and Susan Mineka 202 American It argued that fears are developed by the amygdala and related neural circuitry in an unconscious way and is relatively impenetrable to cognitive control The triggers for such fears are stimuli that are fear relevant in an evolutionary perspective The paper Traumatic events and post traumatic stress disorder in the community prevalence risk factors and comorbidity was published by German psychologist Axel Perkonigg 203 Ronald C Kessler S Storz and German psychologist Hans Ulrich Wittchen in December 2001 204 Another highly cited paper titled Post Traumatic Stress Disorder was published by American psychiatrist Rachel Yehuda in January 2002 205 The PTSD Workbook Simple Effective Techniques for Overcoming Traumatic Stress Symptoms 206 by American social worker Mary Beth Williams 207 and Finnish psychologist Soili Poijula 208 in March 2002 New editions were released in 2013 and 2016 It has been widely used Predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder and symptoms in adults A meta analysis 209 is a well cited paper published in January 2003 by American psychologists Emily J Ozer 210 Susan R Best Tami L Lipsey and Daniel S Weiss 211 It found that peritraumatic psychological processes not prior characteristics are the strongest predictors of PTSD The highly cited paper Psychological theories of posttraumatic stress disorder was published by British psychologists Chris Brewin 177 and Emily A Holmes in May 2003 It reviewed Foa s emotional processing theory Brewin s dual representation theory and Ehlers and Clark s cognitive theory and found them to significantly overlap 212 The Connor Davidson Resilience Scale was first released by American psychiatrists Kathryn M Connor 213 and Jonathan R T Davidson 214 in September 2003 215 The Emotional Brain The Mysterious Underpinnings of Emotional Life is a well cited book by American neuroscientist Joseph E LeDoux from November 2004 It states that conditions like phobias and PTSD involve malfunctions in the way the brain s emotion systems learn and remember and details how those systems work He posits that trauma initiated conditions occur because the brain s lower amygdala based unconscious fear system is detached from its higher cortical and conscious fear system In 2005 the Swedish Board of Health and Welfare adopted into that country s variation of the ICD a refined conceptualisation of severe burnout it described as exhaustion disorder 216 The Association for Contextual Behavioral Science was established in 2005 becoming the world s dominant ACT body The UK s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence released a PTSD guideline document in 2005 217 It received a major update in December 2018 217 The Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7 GAD 7 is a generalised anxiety disorder measurement instrument released in May 2006 by its American authors the psychiatrists Robert L Spitzer and Kurt Kroenke 218 social worker Janet B W Williams and others 219 Spitzer and Williams were married The PTSD Association of Canada was founded in 2006 220 The American Psychiatric Association s Division 56 Division of Trauma Psychology 221 was founded in 2006 to increase discussion of trauma psychology by American psychiatrists By 2009 it had more than 1200 members 222 Functional Neuroimaging of Anxiety A Meta Analysis of Emotional Processing in PTSD Social Anxiety Disorder and Specific Phobia was a well cited paper of October 2007 It was authored by American neuroscientists Amit Etkin 223 and Tor Wager It found that patients with any of the three disorders consistently showed greater activity than matched comparison subjects in the amygdala and insula 224 The antidepressant and anti anxiety medication Agomelatine was released on the European market in 2009 225 and in Australia in 2010 226 It was developed by Laboratoires Servier in the early 1990s 227 It is considered primarily a melatonin receptor agonist Prevalence of depression anxiety and adjustment disorder in oncological haematological and palliative care settings a meta analysis of 94 interview based studies was a February 2011 paper that was highly cited 228 Its lead author was British psychiatrist Alex J Mitchell 229 In 2012 the Anxiety Disorders Association of America became the Anxiety and Depression Association of America The October 2012 book Brief Interventions for Radical Change 230 established Focused Acceptance and Commitment Therapy FACT a short duration form of ACT The book was written by American husband and wife psychologists Kirk Stroshal and Patricia Robinson 231 and Swedish psychologist Thomas Gustavsson Monkey Mind A Memoir of Anxiety was a popular book released by American journalist Daniel B Smith in July 2012 DSM 5 2013 current edit In 2013 the DSM 5 was released separating out the trauma and stress related disorders Freud s etiology for neuroses from the anxiety disorders The former category includes Reactive attachment disorder Disinhibited social engagement disorder Posttraumatic stress disorder Acute stress disorder Adjustment disorders Other specified trauma and stressor related disorder Adjustment like disorders with a late onset Ataque de nervios Dhat syndrome Khyal cap Kufungisisa Maladi moun Nervios Shenjing shuairuo Susto Taijin kyofusho Persistent complex bereavement disorder Unspecified trauma and stressor related disorderThe popular book My Age of Anxiety Fear Hope Dread and the Search for Peace of Mind was released in January 2014 by American journalist Scott Stossel In September 2014 the bestselling book The Body Keeps the Score Brain Mind and Body in the Healing of Trauma was released by Bessel van der Kolk It explained the author s experiences of psychological trauma and its consequent effects on mental and physical health 232 233 Pharmacological interventions for somatoform disorders in adults was a well cited paper released in November 2014 234 It found that there were no effective pharmaceuticals for the conditions The lead author was German psychologist Maria Kleinstauber 235 The Evil Hours A Biography of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder was a popular book released by American writer and PTSD sufferer David J Morris in January 2015 Another popular book published that month was Rewire Your Anxious Brain How to Use the Neuroscience of Fear to End Anxiety Panic and Worry by Americans Catherine M Pittman 236 psychologist and Elizabeth M Karle 237 author American social psychologists Jeff Greenberg Sheldon Solomon and Tom Pyszczynski released the book The Worm at the Core On the Role of Death in Life in March 2015 This established terror management theory a continuation of Ernst Becker s work positing that the fear of death is a highly impactful part of human psychology The afflicted support charity PTSD UK was established in 2015 238 Declutter Your Mind How to Stop Worrying Relieve Anxiety and Eliminate Negative Thinking is a popular book released in August 2016 by Americans S J Scott 239 psychologist and Barrie Davenport coach The popular book First We Make the Beast Beautiful A New Story About Anxiety was released by Australian journalist Sarah Wilson in February 2017 The American Psychological Association released its Clinical Practice Guideline for the Treatment of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder PTSD in Adults in February 2017 240 The United States Department of Veterans Affairs released a major update of its Clinical Practice Guideline for the Management of PTSD in 2017 241 The role of diet in psychology gained greater attention in the first two decades of the 2000s leading to the concept of nutritional psychiatry and the founding of the Food and Mood Centre at Deakin University in 2017 by Australian psychiatrist Felice Jacka 242 The popular book Unfuck Your Brain Using Science to Get Over Anxiety Depression Anger Freak Outs and Triggers was released by American councillor Faith G Harper 243 in October 2017 The British Psychological Society commissioned the creation of the Power Threat Meaning Framework 192 by a committee over five years with its first major release in January 2018 The framework aims to provide a complete understanding of psychological trauma and the best way to treat it Contrary to most psychological approaches it includes a large focus on the patient s environment The Association Francaise Pierre Janet 244 was publicly inaugurated in March 2018 245 The United Kingdom Psychological Trauma Society UKPTS of psychological trauma treating professionals was formed in 2018 from the UK Trauma Group and the British and Irish Chapter of ESTSS 246 Popular book Welcome to the United States of Anxiety Observations from a Reforming Neurotic was released by American writer Jen Lancaster in October 2020 Another popular book Unwinding Anxiety New Science Shows How to Break the Cycles of Worry and Fear to Heal Your Mind was released by American psychiatrist Judson Brewer in March 2021 The ICD 11 first active in January 2022 included a substantial subset of the DSM V conditions and also complex post traumatic stress disorder Prevention editMain articles Stress management Traumatic memories and Psychological resilience nbsp Transactional Model of Stress and Coping of Richard Lazarus and Susan Folkman See also Human resource management Family therapy and Social work Stress inoculation training was developed to reduce anxiety in doctors during times of intense stress by Donald Meichenbaum 147 It is a combination of techniques including relaxation negative thought suppression and real life exposure to feared situations used in PTSD treatment 247 The therapy is divided into four phases and is based on the principles of cognitive behavioral therapy 147 The first phase identifies the individual s specific reaction to stressors and how they manifest into symptoms The second phase helps teach techniques to regulate these symptoms using relaxation methods The third phase deals with specific coping strategies and positive cognitions to work through the stressors Finally the fourth phase exposes the client to imagined and real life situations related to the traumatic event 248 This training helps to shape the response to future triggers to diminish impairment in daily life Patients with acute stress disorder ASD have been found to benefit from cognitive behavioral therapy in preventing PTSD with clinically meaningful outcomes at six month follow up consultations Supportive counseling was outperformed by a regimen of relaxation cognitive restructuring imaginal exposure and in vivo exposure 249 Programs based on mindfulness based stress reduction also seem to be useful at managing stress 250 Progressive muscle relaxation PMR was developed by Edmund Jacobson 40 PMR involves learning to relieve the tension in specific muscle groups by first tensing and then relaxing each muscle group 41 When the muscle tension is released attention is directed towards the differences felt during tension and relaxation so that the patient learns to recognize the contrast between the states 42 43 This reduces anxiety 44 Playing Tetris shortly after a traumatic experience prevents the development of PTSD in some cases 251 Stanley Rachman compiled lists of factors that promote or impede emotional processing in 1980 the former reducing the development of neurosis the latter making it more likely 124 Aaron Antonovsky stated that a resilient person is more likely to appraise a situation as meaningful predictable and ordered 123 Michael Rutter found that resilience could be improved in an individual by the 1 reduction of risk impact 2 reduction of negative chain reactions 3 establishment and maintenance of self esteem and self efficacy and 4 opening up of opportunities 150 The use of pharmaceuticals to mitigate the consequences of ASD has made some progress The Alpha 1 blocker Prazosin which controls sympathetic response can be administered to patients to help them unwind and enable better sleep 252 It is unclear how it functions in this situation Following a traumatic experience hydrocortisone cortisol has demonstrated some promise as an early prophylactic intervention frequently slowing the onset of PTSD 253 In a systematic literature review in 2014 the Swedish Agency for Health Technology Assessment and Assessment of Social Services SBU found that a number of work environment factors could affect the risk of developing exhaustion disorder or depressive symptoms People who experience a work situation with little opportunity to influence in combination with too high demands develop more depressive symptoms People who experience a lack of compassionate support in the work environment develop more symptoms of depression and exhaustion disorder than others Those who experience bullying or conflict in their work develop more depressive symptoms than others but it is not possible to determine whether there is a corresponding connection for symptoms of exhaustion disorder People who feel that they have urgent work or a work situation where the reward is perceived as small in relation to the effort develops more symptoms of depression and exhaustion disorder than others This also applies to those who experience insecurity in the employment for example concerns that the workplace will be closed down In some work environments people have less trouble People who experience good opportunities for control in their own work and those who feel that they are treated fairly develop less symptoms of depression and exhaustion disorder than others Women and men with similar working conditions develop symptoms of depression as much as exhaustion disorder 254 Etiology editHistoric versions of the DSM and ICD edit The term neurosis is no longer used in a professional diagnostic sense it having been eliminated from the DSM in 1980 with the publication of DSM III and having the last remnants of being removed from the ICD with the enacting of the ICD 11 in 2022 In the ICD 10 it was used in section F48 8 to describe certain minor conditions According to the anxiety concept of the term there were many different neuroses including obsessive compulsive disorder OCD obsessive compulsive personality disorder impulse control disorder anxiety disorder histrionic personality disorder dissociative disorder a great variety of phobiasAccording to C George Boeree professor emeritus at Shippensburg University the symptoms of neurosis may involve 255 anxiety sadness or depression anger irritability mental confusion low sense of self worth etc behavioral symptoms such as phobic avoidance vigilance impulsive and compulsive acts lethargy etc cognitive problems such as unpleasant or disturbing thoughts repetition of thoughts and obsession habitual fantasizing negativity and cynicism etc Interpersonally neurosis involves dependency aggressiveness perfectionism schizoid isolation socio culturally inappropriate behaviors etc Psychoanalytic Freudian theory edit Main article Psychoanalysis According to psychoanalytic theory neuroses may be rooted in ego defense mechanisms though the two concepts are not synonymous Defense mechanisms are a normal way of developing and maintaining a consistent sense of self i e an ego However only those thoughts and behaviors that produce difficulties in one s life should be called neuroses A neurotic person experiences emotional distress and unconscious conflict which are manifested in various physical or mental illnesses the definitive symptom being anxiety Neurotic tendencies are common and may manifest themselves as acute or chronic anxiety depression OCD a phobia or a personality disorder Freud s typology of neuroses in Introduction to Psychoanalysis 1923 included Psychoneuroses Transference neuroses Hysteria Anxiety hysteria Various phobias Conversion hysteria Compulsion neuroses Trauma neuroses Narcissistic neuroses True neuroses Neurasthenia Anxiety neurosis Hypochondria Paraphrenia schizophrenia spectrum Dementia praecox Paranoia Megalomania Mania of persecution Erotomania Mania of jealousyJungian theory edit Main article Jung s theory of neurosis nbsp Carl Jung developed psychoanalytic theories of neurosis Carl Jung found his approach particularly effective for patients who are well adjusted by social standards but are troubled by existential questions Jung claims to have frequently seen people become neurotic when they content themselves with inadequate or wrong answers to the questions of life 256 140 Accordingly the majority of his patients consisted not of believers but of those who had lost their faith 256 140 A contemporary person according to Jung is blind to the fact that with all his rationality and efficiency he is possessed by powers that are beyond his control His gods and demons have not disappeared at all they have merely got new names They keep him on the run with restlessness vague apprehensions psychological complications an insatiable need for pills alcohol tobacco food and above all a large array of neuroses 257 82 Jung found that the unconscious finds expression primarily through an individual s inferior psychological function whether it is thinking feeling sensation or intuition The characteristic effects of a neurosis on the dominant and inferior functions are discussed in his Psychological Types Jung also found collective neuroses in politics Our world is so to speak dissociated like a neurotic 257 85 Horney s theory edit In her final book Neurosis and Human Growth Karen Horney lays out a complete theory of the origin and dynamics of neurosis 258 In her theory neurosis is a distorted way of looking at the world and at oneself which is determined by compulsive needs rather than by a genuine interest in the world as it is Horney proposes that neurosis is transmitted to a child from their early environment and that there are many ways in which this can occur 258 18 When summarized they all boil down to the fact that the people in the environment are too wrapped up in their own neuroses to be able to love the child or even to conceive of him as the particular individual he is their attitudes toward him are determined by their own neurotic needs and responses The child s initial reality is then distorted by their parents needs and pretenses Growing up with neurotic caretakers the child quickly becomes insecure and develops basic anxiety To deal with this anxiety the child s imagination creates an idealized self image 258 22 Each person builds up his personal idealized image from the materials of his own special experiences his earlier fantasies his particular needs and also his given faculties If it were not for the personal character of the image he would not attain a feeling of identity and unity He idealizes to begin with his particular solution of his basic conflict compliance becomes goodness love saintliness aggressiveness becomes strength leadership heroism omnipotence aloofness becomes wisdom self sufficiency independence What according to his particular solution appear as shortcomings or flaws are always dimmed out or retouched Once they identify themselves with their idealized image a number of effects follow They will make claims on others and on life based on the prestige they feel entitled to because of their idealized self image They will impose a rigorous set of standards upon themselves in order to try to measure up to that image They will cultivate pride and with that will come the vulnerabilities associated with pride that lacks any foundation Finally they will despise themselves for all their limitations Vicious circles will operate to strengthen all of these effects Eventually as they grow to adulthood a particular solution to all the inner conflicts and vulnerabilities will solidify They will be either expansive displaying symptoms of narcissism perfectionism or vindictiveness self effacing and compulsively compliant displaying symptoms of neediness or codependence resigned displaying schizoid tendencies In Horney s view mild anxiety disorders and full blown personality disorders all fall under her basic scheme of neurosis as variations in the degree of severity and in the individual dynamics The opposite of neurosis is a condition Horney calls self realization a state of being in which the person responds to the world with the full depth of their spontaneous feelings rather than with anxiety driven compulsion Thus the person grows to actualize their inborn potentialities Horney compares this process to an acorn that grows and becomes a tree the acorn has had the potential for a tree inside it all along See also editIndividuation Treatments for PTSD Sublimation Post traumatic growthReferences edit Neurosis The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language HarperCollins Publishers 2022 ISBN 978 0 618 82435 9 a b c Knoff WF July 1970 A history of the concept of neurosis with a memoir of William Cullen The American Journal of Psychiatry 127 1 80 84 doi 10 1176 ajp 127 1 80 PMID 4913140 Bailey H 1927 Demonstrations of physical signs in clinical surgery 1st ed Bristol J Wright and Sons p 208 Serturner FW Trommsdorff S 1817 Ueber das Morphium eine neue salzfahige Grundlage und die Mekonsaure als Hauptbestandtheile des Opiums Annalen der Physik in German 55 1 56 89 Bibcode 1817AnP 55 56S doi 10 1002 andp 18170550104 Serturner FW 1817 Uber das Morphium eine neue salzfahige Grundlage und die Mekonsaure als Hauptbestandteile des Opiums Annalen der Physik 25 1 56 90 Bibcode 1817AnP 55 56S doi 10 1002 andp 18170550104 a b Seguin EC 1890 Lectures on some points in the treatment and management of neuroses Appleton Offit P March April 2017 God s Own Medicine Skeptical Inquirer 41 2 44 xxii Introduction to Studies on Hysteria Kesteven WB July 1869 Remarks on the use of the Bromides in the treatment of Epilepsy and other Neuroses Journal of Mental Science 15 70 205 213 doi 10 1192 S0368315X00233008 Seguin EC July 1877 The Abuse and Use of Bromides The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 4 3 445 462 doi 10 1097 00005053 187707000 00002 S2CID 145482861 Freud S 1995 Five Lectures on Psycho Analysis Penguin pp 1 2 10 The details of her illness are taken from the case history published by Freud and Breuer in Freud S Breuer J August 2020 Studien uber Hysterie e artnow ISBN 978 80 268 2615 6 as well as from her medical records found by Albrecht Hirschmuller in the papers of Bellevue Sanatorium and published in his Hirschmuller A 1978 Physiologie und Psychoanalvse im Leben und Werk Josef Breuers Jahrbuch der Psychoanalyse Bern Hans Huber Hirschmuller A 1978 Physiologie und Psychoanalvse im Leben und Werk Josef Breuers Jahrbuch der Psychoanalyse Bern Hans Huber p 35 Edinger D 1968 Bertha Pappenheim Freud s Anna O Congregation Solel p 15 Orr Andrawes A 1987 The case of Anna O a neuropsychiatric perspective Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association 35 2 387 419 doi 10 1177 000306518703500205 PMID 3294985 S2CID 32184483 Macmillan M 1990 Freud Evaluated The Completed Arc Elsevier ISBN 978 0 08 086729 8 page needed a b Webster R 1996 Why Freud Was Wrong Sin Science And Psychoanalysis Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 09128 7 page needed Kaplan R March 2004 O Anna being Bertha Pappenheim historiography and biography Australasian Psychiatry 12 1 62 8 doi 10 1046 j 1039 8562 2003 02062 x PMID 15715742 S2CID 33384890 Clouston TS 1897 Clinical Lectures on Mental Diseases Lea Brothers page needed non primary source needed a b Charcot JM 1889 Lectures on the Diseases of the Nervous System Delivered at La Salpetriere unknown library The New Sydenham Society Walton GL 1883 Two Cases of Hysteria Archives of Medicine 10 88 95 a b White MB August 1997 Jean Martin Charcot s contributions to the interface between neurology and psychiatry The Canadian Journal of Neurological Sciences Le Journal Canadien des Sciences Neurologiques 24 3 254 260 doi 10 1017 S0317167100021909 PMID 9276114 S2CID 7364585 Jean Martin Charcot A Science Odyssey People and Discoveries Public Broadcasting Service PBS 1998 Retrieved 13 October 2008 Breuer J Freud S 1956 On the Psychical Mechanism of Hysterical Phenomena 1893 The International Journal of Psycho Analysis 37 8 13 Hart Otto Van Der Horst Rutger 14 April 1989 The Dissociation Theory of Pierre Janet PDF Retrieved 23 August 2023 Freud S 1984 Metapsychology The Theory Of Psychoanalysis Freud Library Vol 11 UK Penguin p 52 ISBN 978 0 14 021740 7 Clouston TS 1891 The Neuroses of Development Being the Morrison Lectures for 1890 Morison lectures 1890 Oliver and Boyd hdl 2027 wu 89051300259 OCLC 609217760 page needed Breuer J Freud S Studies On Hysteria Universal Digital Library Basic Books Oulmont P Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 1894 Therapeutique des nevroses Paris O Doin Kraepelin E 1899 Psychiatrie ein Lehrbuch fur Studirende und Aerzte Lamar Soutter Library Univ of Mass Medical School Leipzig J A Barth ISBN 978 0 405 07442 4 a b c Tremblay JM 2005 02 02 Pierre Janet 1859 1947 philosophe devenu medecin et psychologue texte Retrieved 2023 04 13 Janet P 1914 Nevroses et idees fixes University of Ottawa Paris Librairie Felix Alcan Pitman RK 1984 12 01 Janet s Obsessions and Psychasthenia a synopsis The Psychiatric Quarterly 56 4 291 314 doi 10 1007 BF01064475 PMID 6399751 S2CID 23032117 Accueil SFP SFP in French Retrieved 2023 07 08 a b Isabelle S Pierre Janet FranceArchives in French Retrieved 2023 07 08 Lopez Munoz F Ucha Udabe R Alamo C December 2005 The history of barbiturates a century after their clinical introduction Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment 1 4 329 343 PMC 2424120 PMID 18568113 Janet P 1907 The Major Symptoms of Hysteria Fifteen Lectures Given in the Medical School University of California The Macmillan company Pierre Janet French Neurologist and Psychologist 2022 11 03 Retrieved 2023 04 21 a b Sletvold J 3 July 2016 Freud s Three Theories of Neurosis Towards a Contemporary Theory of Trauma and Defense Psychoanalytic Dialogues 26 4 460 475 doi 10 1080 10481885 2016 1190611 S2CID 151623430 a b c Jacobson E 1929 Progressive relaxation Chicago University of Chicago Press a b Nathoo Ayesha 2016 From Therapeutic Relaxation to Mindfulness in the Twentieth Century The Restless Compendium Palgrave Macmillan pp 71 80 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 45264 7 9 ISBN 978 3 319 45263 0 a b Jacobson E 1938 Progressive relaxation Chicago University of Chicago Press a b Ibanez Tarin C Manzanera Escarti R 2012 09 01 Tecnicas cognitivo conductuales de facil aplicacion en atencion primaria I SEMERGEN Medicina de Familia in Spanish 38 6 377 387 doi 10 1016 j semerg 2011 07 019 ISSN 1138 3593 PMID 22935834 a b O Toole Marie T ed 2005 Encyclopedia amp dictionary of medicine nursing amp allied health 7th Revised ed Philadelphia Saunders ISBN 9781416026044 APsaA Mission amp Vision APsaA www apsa org Retrieved 2018 10 01 Psychoanalysis and Neurosis Collected Works of C G Jung Volume 4 Freud amp Psychoanalysis 2014 pp 243 251 doi 10 1515 9781400850938 243 ISBN 978 1 4008 5093 8 Cannon WB 1915 Bodily changes in pain hunger fear and rage New York Appleton Century Crofts p 211 Parry M October 2006 Thomas W Salmon advocate of mental hygiene American Journal of Public Health 96 10 1741 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2006 095794 PMC 1586146 PMID 17008565 Salmon TW 1917 The care and treatment of mental diseases and war neuroses shell shock in the British army University of California Libraries New York City War Work Committee of the National Committee for Mental Hygiene Inc a b Freud S 1920 A General Introduction to Psychoanalysis Harvard University H Liveright OBITUARY British Medical Journal 1 4185 463 464 1941 03 22 doi 10 1136 bmj 1 4185 463 a PMC 2161727 Ross TA 1949 The Common Neuroses 2nd ed Edward Arnold And Company Freud Sigmund 1955 1923 The Ego and the Id In Standard Edition 19 edited by J Strachey London Hogarth Press Lay summaries via Simply Psychology and JSTOR Daily Roundtable Glossary via University of Notre Dame Lieberman E James Kramer Robert 2012 The letters of Sigmund Freud amp Otto Rank inside psychoanalysis Baltimore Johns Hopkins university press ISBN 978 1 4214 0354 0 Freud Sigmund 1977 Inhibitions Symptoms and Anxiety Norton ISBN 978 0 393 00874 6 Jacobson Edmund 1974 Progressive relaxation a physiological and clinical investigation of muscular states and their significance in psychology and medical practice Internet Archive Chicago Ill University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 39059 8 The man who invented relaxation BBC News 2015 11 04 Retrieved 2023 12 16 Jacobson Edmund 1976 You must relax Internet Archive New York McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 032182 3 Cannon WB 1932 The Wisdom of the Body New York W W Norton and Company pp 177 201 Logie HB 1938 Standard classified nomenclature of disease Chicago American Medical Association Taylor S Sirois F 2012 Health Psychology 2nd Canadian ed McGraw Hill Ryerson ISBN 978 0070319790 Stern A October 1938 Psychoanalytic Investigation of and Therapy in the Border Line Group of Neuroses The Psychoanalytic Quarterly 7 4 467 489 doi 10 1080 21674086 1938 11925367 Harms E June 1937 The Social Bacground of Occupational Neuroses The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 85 6 689 695 doi 10 1097 00005053 193706000 00004 a b Russon J 2003 Human Experience Philosophy Neurosis and the Elements of Everyday Life State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 5754 0 page needed a b Jacobson K 2006 The interpersonal expression of human spatiality a phenomenological interpretation of anorexia nervosa Chiasmi International 157 174 doi 10 5840 chiasmi2006824 Shephard Ben A War of Nerves Soldiers and Psychiatrists 1914 1994 London Jonathan Cape 2000 ISBN missing page needed a b Bryant R Harvey A 2000 Acute Stress Disorder A Handbook Of Theory Assessment And Treatment Washington D C American Psychological Association pp 3 40 87 134 PTSD from Armistice Day to DSM 5 VA News news va gov 2013 11 07 Retrieved 2023 04 21 American Journal of Psychoanalysis 2018 02 26 Retrieved 2023 04 14 Former APA Presidents www apa org Retrieved 2023 07 08 Eysenck HJ 1950 dimensions of personality Internet Archive routledge amp kegan paul limited Guex G 2015 Kahr B Rudnytski PL eds The Abandonment Neurosis The History of Psychoanalysis Series Translated by Douglass PD London Karnac Books ISBN 978 1 78220 191 5 Rogers CR 1952 Communication Its Blocking and Its Facilitation ETC 9 2 83 88 JSTOR 42581028 About NASAP North American Society for Adlerian Psychology Retrieved 2023 04 14 a b c US Army 1952 DSM 1 Full PDF Andreasen NC October 2010 Posttraumatic stress disorder a history and a critique Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1208 Psychiatric and Neurologic Aspects of War 67 71 Bibcode 2010NYASA1208 67A doi 10 1111 j 1749 6632 2010 05699 x PMID 20955327 S2CID 42645212 a b American Psychiatric Association 1952 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual American Psychiatric Association Mental Hospital Service p 326 3 ISBN 978 0890420171 Fitzpatrick L 2010 01 07 A brief history of antidepressants Time Retrieved 19 October 2014 Lemke TL Williams DA 2008 Foye s Principles of Medicinal Chemistry 6th ed Philadelphia Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins pp 568 600 Abramowitz JS Deacon BJ Whiteside PH 2010 Exposure Therapy for Anxiety Principles and Practice Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 60918 016 4 Ludwig BJ Piech E 1951 Some anticonvulsant agents derived from 1 3 propanediol J Am Chem Soc 73 12 5779 5781 doi 10 1021 ja01156a086 Tone A 2009 The Fashionable Pill The Age of Anxiety A History of America s Turbulent Affair with Tranquilizers New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 08658 0 May R 1950 The meaning of anxiety New York Ronald Press Company doi 10 1037 10760 000 Pols H Oak S December 2007 War amp military mental health the US psychiatric response in the 20th century American Journal of Public Health 97 12 2132 2142 doi 10 2105 AJPH 2006 090910 PMC 2089086 PMID 17971561 Our Mission and History Albert Ellis Institute Retrieved 2023 04 15 Hilton C 3 July 2018 Dr Russell Barton Belsen concentration camp and 1960s psychiatric hospitals in England the controversy Contemporary British History 32 3 307 335 doi 10 1080 13619462 2018 1477597 S2CID 149881128 Barton R 2013 Institutional Neurosis Butterworth Heinemann ISBN 978 1 4831 8341 1 page needed non primary source needed Shorter E 2005 Benzodiazepines A Historical Dictionary of Psychiatry Oxford University Press pp 41 42 ISBN 978 0 19 517668 1 a b Conis E 2008 02 18 Valium had many ancestors Los Angeles Times Retrieved 2023 04 15 Shorter E 2008 10 28 Before Prozac The Troubled History of Mood Disorders in Psychiatry Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 970933 5 Mora G Lopez Pinero GM July 1966 Origenes historicos del concepto de neurosis Valencia Catedra e Instituto de Historia de la Medicina 1963 p 206 Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 2 3 276 278 doi 10 1002 1520 6696 196607 2 3 lt 276 AID JHBS2300020313 gt 3 0 CO 2 Z Lopez Pinero JM 1983 Historical Origins of the Concept of Neurosis doi 10 1017 CBO9780511753510 ISBN 978 0 521 24972 0 page needed Boydston G 1974 A history and status report of Neurotics Anonymous an organization offering self help for the mentally and emotionally disturbed Ed M thesis Miami Florida Barry University OCLC 14126024 Sagarin E 1969 Chapter 9 Mental patients are they their brothers therapists Odd man in societies of deviants in America Chicago Illinois Quadrangle Books pp 210 232 ISBN 978 0 531 06344 6 OCLC 34435 Dabrowski K 1964 Positive disintegration Internet Archive Boston Little Brown Behavior Analysis Div 25 www apadivisions org Retrieved 2023 07 15 Eysenck HJ Rachman S 2014 The Causes and Cures of Neurosis An Introduction to Modern Behaviour Therapy Based on Learning Theory and the Principles of Conditioning Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 84101 6 page needed Derogatis LR Lipman RS Rickels K Uhlenhuth EH Covi L January 1974 The Hopkins Symptom Checklist HSCL a self report symptom inventory Behavioral Science 19 1 1 15 doi 10 1002 bs 3830190102 PMID 4808738 Fossion P Rejas MC Servais L Pelc I Hirsch S 2003 Family approach with grandchildren of Holocaust survivors American Journal of Psychotherapy 57 4 519 527 doi 10 1176 appi psychotherapy 2003 57 4 519 PMID 14735877 ISTSS History istss org Retrieved 2023 04 14 Rycroft C 1968 Anxiety and Neurosis Routledge amp CRC Press ISBN 978 0 946439 52 2 Retrieved 2023 04 14 Psychologist McNeil Dies At 50 Ann Arbor District Library aadl org Retrieved 2023 04 14 McNeil EB 1970 Neuroses and Personality Disorders Englewood Cliffs N J Prentice Hall ISBN 978 0 13 611509 0 OCLC 97389 Spielberger C Gorssuch R Lushene P Vagg P Jacobs G 1983 Manual for the State Trait Anxiety Inventory Consulting Psychologists Press page needed Janov A 1980 Introduction Prisoners of Pain Unlocking the Power of the Mind to End Suffering Anchor Press Doubleday ISBN 978 0 385 15791 9 page needed Blazer DG August 1992 William W K Zung MDiv MS MD Journal of Clinical Psychopharmacology 12 4 234 doi 10 1097 00004714 199208000 00003 Zung WW November 1971 A Rating Instrument For Anxiety Disorders Psychosomatics 12 6 371 379 doi 10 1016 S0033 3182 71 71479 0 PMID 5172928 a b c d Andersen J Kristensen AS Bang Andersen B Stromgaard K 2009 Recent advances in the understanding of the interaction of antidepressant drugs with serotonin and norepinephrine transporters Chem Commun 25 3677 92 doi 10 1039 b903035m PMID 19557250 a b Richard C Dart 2004 Medical Toxicology Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins pp 836 ISBN 978 0 7817 2845 4 In Memoriam Lynda Lytle Holmstrom www bc edu Retrieved 2023 04 13 Holmstrom LL Burgess AW 1978 The Victim of Rape Institutional Reactions Wiley Interscience ISBN 978 0471407850 Frishman WH Cheng Lai A Nawarskas J 2005 Current Cardiovascular Drugs Current Science Group p 152 ISBN 978 1 57340 221 7 Retrieved 2010 09 07 Arcangelo VP Peterson AM 2006 Pharmacotherapeutics for advanced practice a practical approach Lippincott Williams amp Wilkins p 205 ISBN 978 0 7817 5784 3 Retrieved 2010 09 07 Sir James Black OM The Telegraph March 23 2010 Archived from the original on March 27 2010 Retrieved March 25 2010 Balon R Starcevic V Silberman E Cosci F Dubovsky S Fava GA et al 2020 03 09 The rise and fall and rise of benzodiazepines a return of the stigmatized and repressed Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria 42 3 243 244 doi 10 1590 1516 4446 2019 0773 PMC 7236156 PMID 32159714 Washton AM Zweben JE 2011 Treating Alcohol and Drug Problems in Psychotherapy Practice Doing What Works New York Guilford Publications p 47 ISBN 978 1 4625 0438 1 Shorter E 2005 B A Historical Dictionary of Psychiatry Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 029201 0 Archived from the original on 28 March 2017 US patent 3296249 Bell SC 5 monocyclic aryl 1 3 dihydro 2h 1 4 benzodiazepin 2 ones published 1967 01 03 issued 1967 01 03 assigned to American Home Products Cook BL 12 July 2009 Stanley C Bell 78 scientist www inquirer com Retrieved 2023 04 16 Brian Shaw CBT Toronto The Clinic on Dupont Retrieved 2023 04 23 Gary Emery Nebraska Authors Retrieved 2023 04 23 Bishop et al 2004 pp 230 231harvnb error no target CITEREFBishopLauShapiroCarlson2004 help Much of the interest in the clinical applications of mindfulness has been sparked by the introduction of Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction MBSR a manualized treatment program originally developed for the management of chronic pain Kabat Zinn 1982 Kabat Zinn Lipworth amp Burney 1985 Kabat Zinn Lipworth Burney amp Sellers 1987 a b Antonovsky A 1979 Health Stress and Coping Jossey Bass Publishers ISBN 978 0 87589 412 6 a b Rachman S 1980 01 01 Emotional processing Behaviour Research and Therapy 18 1 51 60 doi 10 1016 0005 7967 80 90069 8 PMID 7369988 Horwitz AV Wakefield JC 2007 The Loss of Sadness Oxford ISBN 978 0 19 531304 8 a b Wilson M March 1993 DSM III and the transformation of American psychiatry a history The American Journal of Psychiatry 150 3 399 410 doi 10 1176 ajp 150 3 399 PMID 8434655 a b American Psychiatric Association Task Force on Nomenclature and Statistics American Psychiatric Association Committee on Nomenclature and Statistics Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders 1980 Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders Internet Archive Washington D C American Psychiatric Association a b AAPCSW History American Association for Psychoanalysis in Clinical Social Work www aapcsw org Retrieved 2023 06 29 Maslach C Jackson SE 1981 The measurement of experienced burnout Journal of Occupational Behavior 2 2 99 113 doi 10 1002 job 4030020205 S2CID 53003646 Maslach C Jackson SE Leiter MP 1996 MBI The Maslach Burnout Inventory Manual Palo Alto Consulting Psychologists Press Tamminga SJ Emal LM Boschman JS Levasseur A Thota A Ruotsalainen JH et al May 2023 Individual level interventions for reducing occupational stress in healthcare workers The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2023 5 CD002892 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD002892 pub6 PMC 10175042 PMID 37169364 American Society of Health System Pharmacists 13 November 2017 Alprazolam Monograph for Professionals Drugs com Archived from the original on 7 December 2010 Retrieved 25 October 2018 Fischer J Ganellin CR 2006 Analogue based Drug Discovery John Wiley amp Sons p 536 ISBN 9783527607495 Archived from the original on 28 August 2021 Retrieved 13 September 2020 Ainsworth SJ 9 December 2013 Hester Dies At 80 Upjohn medicinal chemist designed major drugs Chemical amp Engineering News American Chemical Society 91 49 Waltz TJ Hayes SC 2010 Acceptance and Commitment Therapy In Kazantzis N Reinecke MA Freeman A eds Cognitive and Behavioral Theories in Clinical Practice New York Guilford Press pp 155 156 ISBN 978 1 60623 342 9 OCLC 317927326 https irp fas org doddir army fm4 02 51 pdf full citation needed Miller WR April 1983 Motivational Interviewing with Problem Drinkers Behavioural Psychotherapy 11 2 147 172 doi 10 1017 S0141347300006583 S2CID 4148442 Zigmond AS Snaith RP June 1983 The hospital anxiety and depression scale Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 67 6 361 370 doi 10 1111 j 1600 0447 1983 tb09716 x PMID 6880820 S2CID 2264965 Sims A 2004 02 28 Philip Snaith BMJ 328 7438 527 PMC 351900 Cohen S Kamarck T Mermelstein R December 1983 A global measure of perceived stress Journal of Health and Social Behavior 24 4 385 396 doi 10 2307 2136404 JSTOR 2136404 PMID 6668417 S2CID 21357701 Thomas W Kamarck Ph D Psychology University of Pittsburgh psychology pitt edu Retrieved 2023 07 04 Mermelstein Robin J Psychology University of Illinois Chicago Retrieved 2023 07 04 Drinka GF 1984 The Birth of Neurosis Myth Malady and the Victorians Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 44999 5 Lazarus RS Folkman S 1984 Stress Appraisal and Coping New York Springer Ekman P Campos J 2003 Richard Stanley Lazarus 1922 2002 American Psychologist 58 9 756 757 doi 10 1037 0003 066X 58 9 756 Green E 12 May 2016 What are the most cited publications in the social sciences according to Google Scholar Impact of Social Sciences London School of Economics a b c Meichenbaum D 2009 Stress inoculation training In O Donohue WT Fisher JE eds General principles and empirically supported techniques of cognitive behavior therapy John Wiley amp Sons Inc pp 627 630 ISBN 978 0 470 22777 0 via PsycNET Foa EB Kozak MJ January 1986 Emotional processing of fear exposure to corrective information Psychological Bulletin 99 1 20 35 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 99 1 20 PMID 2871574 S2CID 2317269 History of EMDR Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing EMDR Institute 15 April 2015 Retrieved 2023 05 08 a b Rutter M July 1987 Psychosocial resilience and protective mechanisms American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 57 3 316 331 doi 10 1111 j 1939 0025 1987 tb03541 x PMID 3303954 a b The ESTSS history The European Society of Traumatic Stress Studies Retrieved 2023 04 14 a b Meyer TJ Miller ML Metzger RL Borkovec TD 1990 01 01 Development and validation of the Penn State Worry Questionnaire Behaviour Research and Therapy 28 6 487 495 doi 10 1016 0005 7967 90 90135 6 PMID 2076086 Beck AT Epstein N Brown G Steer RA December 1988 An inventory for measuring clinical anxiety psychometric properties Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 56 6 893 897 doi 10 1037 0022 006X 56 6 893 PMID 3204199 Beck AT Epstein N Brown G Steer R 2012 01 09 Beck Anxiety Inventory Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology doi 10 1037 t02025 000 Stevan Hobfoll scholar google com Retrieved 2023 03 18 Hobfoll SE March 1989 Conservation of resources A new attempt at conceptualizing stress The American Psychologist 44 3 513 524 doi 10 1037 0003 066X 44 3 513 PMID 2648906 S2CID 2258621 Herman JL Perry JC van der Kolk BA April 1989 Childhood trauma in borderline personality disorder The American Journal of Psychiatry 146 4 490 495 doi 10 1176 ajp 146 4 490 PMID 2929750 Richards A June 2020 The Organizational Structure of the American Psychoanalytic Association The Politics of Exclusion Psychoanalytic Review 107 3 211 227 doi 10 1521 prev 2020 107 3 211 PMID 32716719 S2CID 220840824 ADAA Celebrates 40 Years Anxiety and Depression Association of America ADAA adaa org Retrieved 2023 06 26 The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook New Harbinger Publications Inc Retrieved 2023 04 16 About the IKHS International Karen Horney Society Linehan MM 1 December 1991 Cognitive Behavioral Treatment of Chronically Parasuicidal Borderline Patients Archives of General Psychiatry 48 12 1060 1064 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 1991 01810360024003 PMID 1845222 John Marzillier To Hell and Back 2012 p 12 and p 02 Kessler RC McGonagle KA Zhao S Nelson CB 1 January 1994 Lifetime and 12 Month Prevalence of DSM III R Psychiatric Disorders in the United States Results From the National Comorbidity Survey Archives of General Psychiatry 51 1 8 19 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 1994 03950010008002 PMID 8279933 S2CID 22462381 About Us ADAVIC Anxiety Disorders Association of Victoria Inc www adavic org au Retrieved 2023 04 14 Dr Anthony P Mannarino ASK Psychwire Retrieved 2023 04 14 Dr Judith A Cohen ASK Psychwire Retrieved 2023 04 14 Dr Esther Deblinger ASK Psychwire Retrieved 2023 04 14 Depression Anxiety Stress Scales DASS www2 psy unsw edu au Retrieved 2023 07 04 Obituary Emeritus Professor Sydney Syd Harold Lovibond Hon FAPS APS psychology org au Retrieved 2023 07 04 Professor Peter Lovibond UNSW Sites Retrieved 2023 07 04 Lovibond SH Lovibond PH 12 September 2011 Depression Anxiety Stress Scales APA PsycTests Report doi 10 1037 t01004 000 Antony MM Bieling PJ Cox BJ Enns MW Swinson RP June 1998 Psychometric properties of the 42 item and 21 item versions of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales in clinical groups and a community sample Psychological Assessment 10 2 176 181 doi 10 1037 1040 3590 10 2 176 About Phoenix Australia Retrieved 2023 04 14 Kessler RC Sonnega A Bromet E Hughes M Nelson CB December 1995 Posttraumatic stress disorder in the National Comorbidity Survey Archives of General Psychiatry 52 12 1048 1060 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 1995 03950240066012 PMID 7492257 S2CID 14189766 Professor Alexander McFarlane Researcher Profiles Adelaide South Australia The University of Adelaide a b Professor Chris Brewin FBA The British Academy Retrieved 2023 06 26 Dr Tim Dalgleish Cambridge Neuroscience www neuroscience cam ac uk Retrieved 2023 06 26 Prof Stephen Joseph Positive Psychology Trauma Psychotherapy Self Help Retrieved 2023 06 26 Brewin CR Dalgleish T Joseph S October 1996 A dual representation theory of posttraumatic stress disorder Psychological Review 103 4 670 686 doi 10 1037 0033 295X 103 4 670 PMID 8888651 Bisson JI August 2009 Psychological and social theories of post traumatic stress disorder Psychiatry 8 8 290 292 doi 10 1016 j mppsy 2009 05 003 History WAPCEPC and PCEP Journal for Person Centered Psychotherapy and Counselling www pce world org Retrieved 2023 04 15 Startseite DeGPT in German Retrieved 2023 04 14 Breslau N Kessler RC Chilcoat HD Schultz LR Davis GC Andreski P July 1998 Trauma and posttraumatic stress disorder in the community the 1996 Detroit Area Survey of Trauma Archives of General Psychiatry 55 7 626 632 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 55 7 626 PMID 9672053 S2CID 2144000 Foa EB Meadows EA February 1997 Psychosocial treatments for posttraumatic stress disorder a critical review Annual Review of Psychology 48 1 449 480 doi 10 1146 annurev psych 48 1 449 PMID 9046566 Foa EB Cashman L Jaycox L Perry K December 1997 The validation of a self report measure of posttraumatic stress disorder the Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale Psychological assessment APA PsycNet 9 4 445 Chorpita BF Barlow DH July 1998 The development of anxiety the role of control in the early environment Psychological Bulletin 124 1 3 21 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 124 1 3 PMID 9670819 S2CID 14301021 Dr Kirk Strosahl ASK Psychwire Retrieved 2023 07 15 Kelly G Wilson Guilford Press Retrieved 2023 07 15 Who We Are Anxiety Canada Retrieved 2023 04 14 Ehlers A Clark DM April 2000 A cognitive model of posttraumatic stress disorder Behaviour Research and Therapy 38 4 319 345 doi 10 1016 S0005 7967 99 00123 0 PMID 10761279 a b Power Threat Meaning Framework BPS Retrieved 2023 02 18 Kessler RC 2000 05 31 Posttraumatic stress disorder the burden to the individual and to society The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry 61 suppl 5 4 12 discussion 13 4 PMID 10761674 Evangelia Demerouti www tue nl Retrieved 2023 06 29 Demerouti E Bakker AB Nachreiner F Schaufeli WB June 2001 The job demands resources model of burnout The Journal of Applied Psychology 86 3 499 512 doi 10 1037 0021 9010 86 3 499 PMID 11419809 Bakker AB Demerouti E 2007 The Job Demands Resources model State of the art Journal of Managerial Psychology 22 3 309 328 doi 10 1108 02683940710733115 S2CID 1221398 Kroenke K Spitzer RL Williams JB September 2001 The PHQ 9 validity of a brief depression severity measure Journal of General Internal Medicine 16 9 606 613 doi 10 1046 j 1525 1497 2001 016009606 x PMC 1495268 PMID 11556941 Spitzer RL Williams JB Kroenke K Linzer M deGruy FV Hahn SR et al December 1994 Utility of a new procedure for diagnosing mental disorders in primary care The PRIME MD 1000 study JAMA 272 22 1749 1756 doi 10 1001 jama 1994 03520220043029 PMID 7966923 S2CID 13836141 PDF of the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 PDF Pfizer s PHQ Screeners Archived PDF from the original on 10 January 2022 Retrieved 10 January 2022 Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition Text Revision DSM IV TR PDF Archive Today Retrieved 10 January 2022 Ohman A Mineka S July 2001 Fears phobias and preparedness toward an evolved module of fear and fear learning Psychological Review 108 3 483 522 doi 10 1037 0033 295X 108 3 483 PMID 11488376 Susan Mineka Northwestern Scholars Retrieved 2023 07 04 Axel Perkonigg PhD Research profile Research Gate Perkonigg A Kessler RC Storz S Wittchen H January 2000 Traumatic events and post traumatic stress disorder in the community prevalence risk factors and comorbidity Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica 101 1 46 59 doi 10 1034 j 1600 0447 2000 101001046 x PMID 10674950 S2CID 23392803 Yehuda R January 2002 Post traumatic stress disorder The New England Journal of Medicine 346 2 108 114 doi 10 1056 NEJMra012941 PMID 11784878 The PTSD Workbook New Harbinger Publications Inc Retrieved 2023 06 26 Williams Mary Beth ICISF icisf org Retrieved 2023 04 14 Poijula S Soili Poijula Retrieved 2023 04 14 Ozer EJ Best SR Lipsey TL Weiss DS January 2003 Predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder and symptoms in adults a meta analysis Psychological Bulletin 129 1 52 73 doi 10 1037 0033 2909 129 1 52 PMID 12555794 Emily J Ozer PhD UC Berkeley Public Health Faculty UC Berkeley Public Health Retrieved 2023 06 26 Daniel Weiss UCSF Profiles profiles ucsf edu Retrieved 2023 06 26 Brewin CR Holmes EA May 2003 Psychological theories of posttraumatic stress disorder Clinical Psychology Review Post Traumatic Stress Disorder 23 3 339 376 doi 10 1016 S0272 7358 03 00033 3 PMID 12729677 Connor Kathryn M Pri Med Retrieved 2023 07 04 Jonathan R T Davidson Scholars Duke profile scholars duke edu Retrieved 2023 07 04 Connor KM Davidson JR September 2003 Development of a new resilience scale the Connor Davidson Resilience Scale CD RISC Depression and Anxiety 18 2 76 82 doi 10 1002 da 10113 PMID 12964174 S2CID 14347861 Beser A Sorjonen K Wahlberg K Peterson U Nygren A Asberg M February 2014 Construction and evaluation of a self rating scale for stress induced exhaustion disorder the Karolinska Exhaustion Disorder Scale Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 55 1 72 82 doi 10 1111 sjop 12088 PMC 4235404 PMID 24236500 a b Overview Post traumatic stress disorder Guidance NICE www nice org uk 2018 12 05 Retrieved 2023 06 26 Kurt Kroenke MD MACP medicine iu edu Retrieved 2023 07 04 Spitzer RL Kroenke K Williams JB Lowe B May 2006 A brief measure for assessing generalized anxiety disorder the GAD 7 Archives of Internal Medicine 166 10 1092 1097 doi 10 1001 archinte 166 10 1092 PMID 16717171 S2CID 17599514 About PTSD PTSD Association of Canada Retrieved 2023 04 14 Home Division of Trauma Psychology www apatraumadivision org Retrieved 2023 06 25 APA Announces Publication of the Inaugural Issue of Psychological Trauma Theory Research Practice and Policy www apa org Retrieved 2023 06 25 AmitEtkin Twitter Retrieved 2023 07 04 Etkin A Wager TD October 2007 Functional neuroimaging of anxiety a meta analysis of emotional processing in PTSD social anxiety disorder and specific phobia The American Journal of Psychiatry 164 10 1476 1488 doi 10 1176 appi ajp 2007 07030504 PMC 3318959 PMID 17898336 Summary of Product Characteristics PDF European Medicine Agency Archived PDF from the original on 2014 10 29 Retrieved 2013 10 14 TGA eBS Product and Consumer Medicine Information Licence www ebs tga gov au Retrieved 2023 12 07 Agomelatine an overview ScienceDirect Topics www sciencedirect com Retrieved 2023 12 07 Mitchell AJ Chan M Bhatti H Halton M Grassi L Johansen C Meader N February 2011 Prevalence of depression anxiety and adjustment disorder in oncological haematological and palliative care settings a meta analysis of 94 interview based studies The Lancet Oncology 12 2 160 174 doi 10 1016 S1470 2045 11 70002 X PMID 21251875 ORCID orcid org Retrieved 2023 04 14 Brief Interventions for Radical Change New Harbinger Publications Inc Retrieved 2023 07 15 Patricia Robinson Patricia Robinson PhD www patriciarobinsonphd com Retrieved 2023 07 15 Van der Kolk BA 2015 The Body keeps the score brain mind and body in the healing of trauma New York NY Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 312774 1 Bhattacharya S 2014 11 05 The lifelong cost of burying our traumatic experiences New Scientist Retrieved 2019 12 13 Kleinstauber M Witthoft M Steffanowski A van Marwijk H Hiller W Lambert MJ November 2014 Pharmacological interventions for somatoform disorders in adults The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 11 CD010628 doi 10 1002 14651858 CD010628 pub2 PMID 25379990 Profile Division of Health Sciences University of Otago Retrieved 2023 07 08 Catherine Pittman Ph D HSSP Anxiety org Retrieved 2023 04 14 Elizabeth M Karle New Harbinger Publications Inc Retrieved 2023 04 14 Why PTSD UK is here PTSD UK Retrieved 2023 04 14 S J Scott www goodreads com Retrieved 2023 04 14 PTSD Treatments American Psychological Association Retrieved 2023 06 26 VA gov Veterans Affairs www ptsd va gov Retrieved 2023 06 26 Food and mood www deakin edu au Retrieved 2023 09 14 Faith G Harper About Me www faithgharper com Retrieved 2023 04 14 ACCUEIL PIERRE JANET Association PIERRE JANET in French Retrieved 2023 04 21 Inauguration de l ASSOCIATION FRANCAISE PIERRE JANET Reseau Janet Isabelle Saillot isabellesaillot net Retrieved 2023 04 21 Member societies ESTSS Retrieved 2023 04 14 Sharpless BA Barber JP February 2011 A Clinician s Guide to PTSD Treatments for Returning Veterans Professional Psychology Research and Practice 42 1 8 15 doi 10 1037 a0022351 PMC 3070301 PMID 21475611 Stress Inoculation Training PDF VA PTSD Lambert MJ ed 2004 Bergin and Garfield s Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavioral Change New York Wiley page needed Sharma M Rush SE October 2014 Mindfulness based stress reduction as a stress management intervention for healthy individuals a systematic review Journal of Evidence Based Complementary amp Alternative Medicine 19 4 271 286 doi 10 1177 2156587214543143 PMID 25053754 Tetris used to prevent post traumatic stress symptoms Press release NIHR Oxford Health Biomedical Research Centre 3 April 2017 Fanai M Khan MA 2021 Acute Stress Disorder StatPearls Treasure Island FL StatPearls Publishing PMID 32809650 Retrieved 2021 03 14 Astill Wright L Sijbrandij M Sinnerton R Lewis C Roberts NP Bisson JI December 2019 Pharmacological prevention and early treatment of post traumatic stress disorder and acute stress disorder a systematic review and meta analysis Translational Psychiatry 9 1 334 doi 10 1038 s41398 019 0673 5 PMC 6901463 PMID 31819037 Arbetsmiljons betydelse for symtom pa depression och utmattningssyndrom Statens beredning for medicinsk och social utvardering SBU Swedish Agency for Health Technology Assessment and Assessment of Social Services in Swedish 2014 02 19 Retrieved 2022 07 15 Boeree CG 2002 A Bio Social Theory of Neurosis Retrieved 2009 04 21 a b Jung CG Jaffe A 1989 Memories Dreams and Reflections rev ed New York Vintage Books ISBN 0 679 72395 1 a b Jung CG 1964 Man and his symbols Garden City Doubleday ISBN 0 385 05221 9 a b c Horney K 1991 Neurosis and Human Growth The Struggle Toward Self Realization Reissued with a new foreword ed New York W W Norton amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0 393 30775 7 Stress Reduction Program University of Massachusetts Worcester Campus Center for Mindfulness Archived from the original on 2012 04 14 The Stress Reduction Program founded by Dr Jon Kabat Zinn in 1979 Bibliography edit Angyal A 1965 Hanfmann E Jones RM eds Neurosis and Treatment A Holistic Theory Fenichel O 1945 The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis New York Norton Freud S 1953 1974 The Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud Translated by Strachey J London Hogarth Horney K 1945 The Collected Works WW Norton amp Company Horney K 1950 Neurosis and human growth The struggle toward self realization WW Norton amp Company Horwitz AV Wakefield JC 2007 The loss of sadness how psychiatry transformed normal sorrow into depressive disorder Oxford New York Auckland Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 531304 8 Jung CG 1971 1921 Psychological Types The Collected Works of C G Jung Vol 6 Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01813 8 Jung CG 1972 Two essays on analytical psychology 2nd ed Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 01782 4 Jung CG Jaffe A 1989 Memories Dreams and Reflections rev ed New York Vintage Books ISBN 0 679 72395 1 Jung CG Von Franz ML Henderson JL Jacobi J Jaffe A 1964 Man and His Symbols Garden City Doubleday ISBN 0 385 05221 9 Ladell RM Hargreaves TH October 1947 The extent of neurosis British Medical Journal 2 4526 548 549 doi 10 1136 bmj 2 4526 548 PMC 2055884 PMID 20267012 Lopez Pinero JM 1983 Historical Origins of the Concept of Neurosis Translated by Berrios D Cambridge Cambridge University Press McWilliams N 2011 Psychoanalytic Diagnosis Understanding Personality Structure in the Clinical Process 2nd ed Guilford Press ISBN 978 1 60918 494 0 Russon JE 2003 Human experience philosophy neurosis and the elements of everyday life Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 5754 0 Winokur J 2006 Encyclopedia Neurotica Macmillan ISBN 0 312 32501 0 External links editJanov A 1991 Neurosis Retrieved 2009 04 21 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Neurosis amp oldid 1193868452, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.