COVID-19 absolutely did not help anyone who already had some kind of health anxiety. I borrowed this guide from the library as it's a new 2022 edition, which I hoped would be updated to cover the pandemic. Only very brief mentions are included, which is disappointing. The examples used are almost all anxiety about non-infectious illnesses like cancer, motor neurone disease, heart attacks, and schizophrenia. The advice is still largely applicable to fear of COVID-19, I think. There's not much need to design exposure tasks for it, though. They happen whether you want them or not!
I'm giving the book four stars as it is a very readable, well-explained, and clearly structured guide to CBT techniques. For me it was a reminder of the CBT approach and that I don't have classic health anxiety. Ways in which health fears can overlap with phobias and disordered eating aren't covered. Thus it seems like a potentially very helpful book to some but I don't think it will really work for me. (I've already given CBT a try on three previous occasions.) I found reading it calming, though, and the chapter on fear of death is particularly good.
Health anxiety has blighted the last five years for me. It is common amongst cancer sufferers and possibly understandably so. I should have recognised that I was prone to worrying about my health even before my diagnosis and basically finding out my worst fears were realised compounded earlier issues.
I came to this book via the kindle store and I have two main concerns.1) The solutions it offers are not right for everyone with health anxiety, but they do rather make it sound as if to face your worst fears - eg visiting an oncology ward, reading books about people who are terminally ill etc is always a positive way forward. I have had cbt and the effect was temporary and all those memories are still stored in the old anxiety box somewhere and 2) the editing of this ebook is awful. Mis-spellings abound and the charts are almost impossible to read on a kindle - they are far too small to be useful.
I have given it three stars as there is some useful information in this book that will be helpful to many. But if you don't find it so, please don't think you are beyond hope.
Sağlık anksiyetesiyle ilgili oldukça yararlı bir eser olan "Overcoming Health Anxiety: A Self-Help Guide Using Cognitive Behavioural Techniques", yerinde örnekleri ve uygulamalı egzersizleriyle her alandan okuyucuyu içine alan bir kitap. Yeri geldikçe ilgili bölümü açıp yararlanabilecek bir başucu kitabı özelliği taşıyan kitap özellikle sağlık kaygısının önüne geçmek isteyenler için etkili bir başlangıç niteliğinde.
Extremely helpful resource. I binge-listened to the audiobook on Spotify, but I am seriously considering getting the hard copy as a reference. There are some great reflection questions/exercises in here. And as anyone with health anxiety knows, it’s a constant struggle and even though everything in this book makes perfect sense and intellectually is logical, anxiety isn’t — especially health anxiety that has elements of OCD traits driving it. It needs constant work to break through the intrusive thoughts, so this isn’t a one-and-done resource. It requires revisiting.
(Note: I read the second edition, which isn’t on goodreads. I did find a copy of the first edition, which seems much different when I thumbed through it, so I cannot review that version).
As someone who has long understood that they have health anxiety, but was never really motivated to do anything about it, actually dipping into a CBT approach for dealing with this has been both interesting and rewarding. Having had good results from CBT approaches to insomnia in the past, going through this book is a great way to start to tease apart the roots and effects of health anxiety.
Very approachably written, very easy to read, not overly long, and with a great appendix of sheets to monitor your improvement and refer back to.
A damn sight cheaper than therapy, and an eye opener if you're the kind of person who thinks they might have health anxiety, and just 'sucks it up' on a daily basis.
Really thorough and well written book. Loved the narrators voice in this one (sounded like David Attenborough). I think some thought needs to be given towards SSRI's though and some of the new research thats come out about the long term use of them and how that can affect the brain.
When you have had a cancer diagnosis, health anxiety can spiral out of control and be extremely debilitating. I couldn’t face doing most of the exercises regarding CBT for cancer - they seemed too extreme.
I've been reading this book to find help for my daughter who struggles with Health Anxiety. There seem to be lots of practices to work through which is encouraging.
This book started off smacking me in the feels. I literally cried when I started reading it. I had never felt so heard and seen and it hurt to listen to my thoughts and processes being spoken out loud by somebody else.
It was a bitter-sweet release of not feeling alone and having my deepest thoughts brought to the forefront and knowing I will have to address it.
I had to read it in small doses because it overwhelmed me otherwise.
I think some of the information can be useful and helpful. But for some reason, I ended up disengaging from the book. Maybe it's because I felt like some of the exercises would suit me. Or I couldn't apply them to my life.
I started skipping bits or listening to it after towards the end because it didn't feel useful to me.
I think if you're a health anxiety sufferer like me then I'd try reading this book. But I wouldn't call it a substitute for professional help (it doesn't try to be either). There might be some activities that might help, but not everything will apply and sometimes it can be a bit boring to listen too.
If nothing else, the book has helped me realise I am not as bat-shit-crazy as I seem. But I didn't love the book. I probably wouldn't read it again.