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Anxiety disorders: Assessment and management in general practice

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posted on 2024-07-09, 18:47 authored by Michael Kyrios, Richard Moulding, Maja NedeljkovicMaja Nedeljkovic
Background Anxiety is a normal physiological response to a threat. Anxiety disorders occur when this normal physiological response is associated with high levels of autonomic arousal, erroneous cognitions and dysfunctional coping strategies. Anxiety disorders are highly prevalent and present commonly to general practice. Anxiety disorders are often comorbid with other psychiatric and medical disorders and may be associated with significant morbidity. Objective This article describes the diagnosis, assessment and management of anxiety disorders in the general practice setting. Discussion Assessment in patients presenting with anxiety symptoms involves excluding a medical cause, identifying features of specific anxiety disorders as well as other coexisting psychiatric disorders, and assessing the degree of distress. Management options include psychoeducation, psychological treatments (particularly cognitive behaviour therapy) and pharmacological treatments. Patients with a diagnosis of an anxiety disorder can access Medicare funded psychological care under a number of Australian government initiatives. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors and serotonin norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors are the first line pharmacological agents used to treat anxiety disorders. Regular review is vital to monitor for clinical improvement and more complex presentations may require specialist psychological or psychiatric referral.

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ISSN

0300-8495

Journal title

Australian Family Physician

Volume

40

Issue

6

Pagination

4 pp

Publisher

Royal Australian College of General Practitioners

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2011 Australian Family Physician. is reproduced with permission from The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners. Text and images copyright of Australian Family Physician. Permission to reproduce must be sought from the publisher, The Royal Australian College of General Practitioners.

Language

eng

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