There is a huge evidence base around the value of reading to support health and wellbeing. A large number of self-help books have been published. The ‘Overcoming’ series contains over 30 titles that cover a range of difficulties (including but not restricted to mental health problems) that are amenable to a CBT approach.
‘Overcoming Anxiety: A self-help guide using cognitive behavioural techniques’, written by Helen Kennerley, a Clinical Psychologist, delivers exactly what’s on the tin.
It starts with some important ‘psycho-education’: the first part of the book explains what anxiety is, what causes and what maintains anxiety. In the fourth chapter, Kennerley distinguishes between the different diagnoses that fall under the umbrella term ‘anxiety disorders’: phobias, panic disorder, social anxiety, health anxiety generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
She then introduces the reader to the management of the symptoms of anxiety. I found it particularly useful reading her views about the pharmacological management of these symptoms. Helpful as they may sometimes be, anti-anxiety medications tend to be over-prescribed. As a doctor myself, I often feel the pressure to prescribe pills, even when I believe that a non-pharmacological approach may be better.
In the third (and main) part of the book, Kennerley follows a cognitive-behavioural approach to the management of anxiety. She takes the reader through a variety of evidence-based techniques, such as controlled breathing, applied relaxation, distraction, reviewing anxious thoughts and images, graded practice, and problem solving. Even though these techniques are the bread and butter of CBT, they do not always require face-to-face therapy; they can be taught, learned and applied with the help of a book, and this is where the greatest value of ‘Overcoming Anxiety’ lies.
As a Psychiatrist, I have often prescribed this book, alongside face-to-face talking therapy and/or medications. In my opinion, it does not only complement traditional treatments, but it also has the potential to alleviate anxiety symptoms even when used on its own.