Speaking of Psychology - What is anxiety and how can we treat it effectively? With Bunmi Olatunji, PhD
Episode Date: January 12, 2022We’ve all had good reason to feel anxious over the past two years. But sometimes, anxiety is more than a normal response to stress. Anxiety disorders are among the most common of all mental health d...isorders, affecting an estimated 15% to 20% of people at some point in their life. Dr. Bunmi Olatunji, director of the Emotion and Anxiety Research Lab at Vanderbilt University, discusses the emotions that drive anxiety disorders, how to treat them effectively, and how people can recognize the difference between feeling anxious and an anxiety disorder – and know when it’s time to seek help. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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We've all had good reason to feel anxious over the past two years, but sometimes anxiety is more than a normal response to stress.
Anxiety disorders are among the most common of all mental health disorders, affecting an estimated 15% to 20% of all people at some point in their life.
In recent years, scientists have begun to learn more about the underlying causes of these disorders, which include generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and folks.
such as fear of needles or flying. They've also learned more about how to treat anxiety effectively.
So what ties different anxiety disorders together? Where do they come from? What's the difference
between feeling anxious and that anxiety disorder? How do you know if it's time to seek help?
And what effective treatments do we have for anxiety?
Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, the flagship podcast of the American Psychological Association
that examines the links between psychological science and everyday life.
I'm Kim Mills.
Our guest today is Dr. Bunmi Olatunji,
director of the Emotion and Anxiety Research Lab at Vanderbilt University.
Dr. Olatunji studies the role of emotions,
particularly discussed, in driving anxiety symptoms and disorders.
He is also interested in using the knowledge gained from basic research
to develop effective treatments for anxiety disorders.
In addition to his research,
Dr. Olatunji serves as Director of Clinical Training in the Clinical Science Program in
Psychological Sciences at Vanderbilt and as Associate Dean of Academic Affairs in the Graduate School.
Thank you for joining us today, Dr. Olatunji.
Thank you so much for having me. It's a pleasure to be here with you.
So we all experience anxiety at times.
I think it's a familiar feeling to a lot of us, and many of us have been feeling more anxious
than usual these past two years, almost two years now.
what is the difference between everyday anxiety and a clinical anxiety disorder?
I think that your question raises a very important point that I hope we're able to kind of get
across in this conversation.
And that is anxiety is an adaptive, affective process.
So when we think about anxiety, we think about this as being a feeling of nervousness
and apprehension in response to a perceived threat.
And this can take many shapes and sizes.
and the things that trigger anxiety vary for different people.
So, for example, some people's anxiety may be in response to an anticipation of a specific event.
It may be in response to an intrusive thought.
Or it could just be an uneasy feeling with regards to uncertainty.
And those type of experiences are relatively normal.
Now, when we start to think about the transition from adaptive normal anxiety into clinical anxiety,
then the question really is, to what experience?
extent do these experiences interfere with one's ability to function?
So are these things getting in the way of our ability to have to hold a job?
Are they getting in the way of our ability to social the way that we want to?
Are they interfering with our ability to function within our family systems?
So really the question of whether or not these things are clinical levels of anxiety
is really predicated upon the extent to which they interfere with one's ability to live the life
that they want to live, right?
And so how do you know that it's time to start seeking mental health treatment?
Yeah, I think that that question really highlights this sort of disconnect between the experience itself and the dysfunction that's associated with it, right?
And I think that for people, when they start to ask the question, well, when do I need help, right?
When should I go see a therapist?
And I think that, you know, the answer that I often times give people is, when is your quality of life
impacted, right? When is it the case that you're not able to have a high quality of life?
And when you sort of reached that point when your quality of life is impacted, I think that's
the time that's really important to go see a professional.
Now, you're an expert in cognitive behavioral therapy. Can you tell us more about CBT in
relation to anxiety? How does it work and how is it used to treat anxiety disorders?
Yeah, so cognitive behavior therapy or CBT is really based on several sort of core principles,
right? And so this particular therapy is largely based on the notion that anxiety disorders
are based, at least in part, on faulty or dysfunctional ways of thinking, that anxiety disorders are based on
learned patterns of maladaptive behavior. And so the notion here is that if we can change how
people think or change the maladaptive behavior in the case of anxiety is more often than not
its avoidance, if we can alter those thinking patterns and behavioral patterns, then we can
help treat the anxiety disorder. Right. So that's really the underlying premise of cognitive
behavior therapy, is really trying to address the cognition, the thinking patterns, and the
behavior, the maladative behavior that maintain the anxiety disorders.
And so when we talk about CBT and anxiety, what might that treatment look like?
Particularly, say, if I have a phobia, how would you use CBT to treat that?
Yeah, so with specific phobias, you know, I think the good news is that we actually have
very, very efficacious, highly effective cognitive behavioral sort of interventions for phobias.
And those treatments largely emphasize the process or the intervention of exposure therapy.
So in the context of treating somebody who has a phobia, the approach that I would take
within the umbrella of cognitive behavior therapy is implementing an exposure protocol
that basically requires me to expose you to sort of elements of the things that you're afraid of.
But we're going to do in a very gradual sense, right?
So we may come up with a list, a hierarchy, if you will, of elements of the phobia that you're afraid of
and kind of work our way up from the least anxiety-provoking, right?
So looking at pictures or spiders to the most anxiety-provoking, having a spider crawl on your shoulder,
and work our way up that hierarchy and use exposure as a way of learning to abitulate to the
experience of anxiety, but also as an opportunity to learn that there is no catastrophe associated
with coming into contact with the thing that you're afraid of.
Now, what about medication? Are there effective medications to treat anxiety disorders?
And do you use medication in concert with CBT? Do you try one first, one second, work them together,
How does that go for most people?
Yeah, that's an excellent question.
The medication question obviously is one that comes up quite a bit.
And so it's a complicated question.
So the answer is going to be equally as complicated, I'm afraid.
So the short answer is that, well, yes.
So there are evidence-based pharmacological interventions for anxiety and related disorders.
And in most cases, some of those pharmacological agents tend to be SSRIs.
Now, the question then becomes, well, how do we choose?
How do we decide which one do we try?
Which one do we go with first?
And I think that part of that answer comes with, well, what is the comparative efficacy?
So if I take my medication and I compare it to, let's say, CBT, what does the data say about outcome?
And, you know, all things being equal, you know, it tends to be the case for anxiety disorders
that medication and cognitive behavior therapy tend to be about comparable in their efficacy.
But of course, the question with the medication is, well, how does the side effects factor
into your decision making about whether or not to use medication versus CBT?
There's also the issue of the long-term benefits.
Because with medication, more often than not, that's something that you're going to have to state.
with for the long term, right? Whereas with CBT, you know, you do anywhere from 12 to 20 sessions,
you have the tools and the skills, and then you're on your way. Right. So although there tends to be
relatively equivalent efficacy, I think there's a different picture when we start to ask the
questions about long-term effectiveness, right? Because oftentimes when you take the medication away,
what happens is that you have a lot of relapse, right? Whereas with CBT, you don't see that as much,
Right? Because now the people have the skills to deal with the anxiety-related symptoms.
So many people, when they think about the emotions that are associated with anxiety, they
think about fear, and I know you mentioned that earlier. But your research focuses a lot on a different
emotion, disgust. Let's talk about that. What's the connection between disgust and anxiety?
Yeah. So our interest in the emotion of disgust, you know, is largely,
a result of listening to our patients, right? And when you think about a disorder like
obsessive compulsive disorder, for example, or even spider phobia, or individuals who may be
phobic of blood needles, injections, and things of that sort, you know, it became clear to us
that there's a large majority of those patients, and OCD, I think, is a good example, especially
with patients who have sort of contamination concerns, that a lot of those patients,
kind of describe the distress associated with their symptoms as one of disgust and not fear.
So the language that they oftentimes use is really this notion of, you know, I'm not really
afraid of it, but it certainly grosses me out, and I just cannot handle that, right?
So in the language, they're really describing a different affective process that they're experiencing.
And so we've been really interested in really trying to figure out, well, is this distinction that
they're making?
Is it a meaningful one? And does that really tell us anything different about the prognosis of their illness?
Let's talk for a minute about needle phobia, which is something that's been very much in the news of late because everybody is, or at least we hope everybody is getting vaccines.
How do you use CBT to treat needle phobia? I mean, are you giving people bogus injections? I mean, an injection is an injection. So how do you desensitize people to that?
So the question of, you know, how do we use CBT to treat blood injection injury phobia?
The good news is that the data that we have on the exposure-based approaches to treating that particular
phobia is really quite impressive.
So much so that there are, in fact, treatment protocols that, you know, within three to five
hours of treating somebody, you can actually get pretty good effects.
So this can be something that if a person was committed to, they can overcome,
in a day of intensive therapy.
So to your question about what exactly does the therapy actually look like from an exposure
standpoint, well, again, you know, so we very well may start from looking at pictures of
injections and then working our way up, looking at videos, maybe taking a trip over to the
Red Cross and observing and maybe putting a needle right up to the arm.
So there are things that we can do in a very hierarchical way to, A, facilitate this notion of
habituation, right, to get the person to abituate to their anxiety, but also to kind of use
those really, those exposure items as we are sort of engaging in some corrective learning,
right? So nothing catastrophic is going to happen. Now, of course, we do have the issue
of fainting, right? That's a very common thing that happens with people who are
phobic of needles. So the vasovagal sort of syncope response is a very common thing. And what's
really interesting is that there have been some modifications as to the exposure protocols that they
can also effectively treat individuals who have sort of this fainting response. And that is often
referred to as the applied tension technique. So within the context of doing the exposure work,
if you're having patients who have sort of fainting symptoms also engage in some applied muscle
tension, right? That actually helps to suppress the fainting response, right? So then they can
fully benefit from the exposure work. So there's actually very good evidence-based work out
there for individuals who may have that fear who want to get vaccinated. You know,
they can actually be effectively treated fairly quickly so they can do that.
For many people, the COVID-19 pandemic has been.
a major cause of anxiety over the last almost two years. And you've been doing some research
on anxiety during the pandemic. Can you talk about that? What is it that you're seeing? And is there
indeed a measurable increase? Yeah, I think that there is a measurable increase in anxiety symptoms
over the time course of the pandemic. And of course, part of the challenge for us as clinical
scientists is really trying to conceptualize, well, how much of that is normative, is adaptive, right? Because
the truth is, you know, we are sort of in this context of uncertainty. We're in this context
of uncontrollability. We're in this context of unpredictability, right? So their new variants
are coming out at rates that we can often predict. And that's, you know, the uncertainty,
the uncontrollability and the unpredictability is sort of a context in which anxiety tends to
manifest. So those are sort of the building blocks, if you will, for people to experience
anxiety. So some of the increase that we're seeing during the pandemic really should be expected
and sort of is what would be predicted, right? Some of that is adaptive. But within that,
we are seeing, you know, a certain percentage of individuals who were already at risk to begin with,
right? So they had various risk factors. And this is just the stressor that sort of makes those
risk factors manifest. So we are seeing an uptick, if you will, not only adaptive anxiety,
but also clinical levels of anxiety.
But again, some of that is to be expected, given the context that we're in.
When you say adaptive anxiety, what exactly do you mean by that?
Well, I think we would agree that anxiety can also motivate problem solving, right?
And so for a lot of people, the anxiety motivates them to socially distance.
It motivates them to make sure that they have their mask candy.
And so some of that anxiety that we're feeling, or they were,
seeing is adaptive in the sense that it's motivating us to do the things that we need to do
to keep us safe.
So it's not always a bad thing sometimes.
No, it's not always a bad thing.
I think I would be more concerned about the absence of some anxiety.
So what got you interested in studying anxiety in specific?
Are you an anxious guy?
Well, I don't think so.
Not terribly so.
Well, you know, my graduate school advisor, Dr. Jeffrey Lohr, who unfortunately passed away this year,
this was sort of his bread and butter, right?
So this was something that he was sort of very interested in and studied quite extensively.
And he was really the one that kind of opened my eyes at this question of disgust and anxiety
and how do we sort of fit this emotion into the clinical picture.
And, you know, when I first started, you know, really working in this area back in 2000,
there really wasn't any research undiscussed within the context of anxiety pathology.
So he was really working in his lab and trying to figure out this new piece of the anxiety puzzle,
this question of discuss, then that then motivated me to start thinking about other things,
like just in terms of, you know, what are the evidence-based therapies for anxiety disorders?
How do we implement those?
What are some questions with regards to dissemination of these therapies?
So it was really that basic work in graduate school that really motivated me to start asking
some of these other questions about anxiety-related psychopathology.
So what are the next big questions for you?
What are you working on?
Where do you hope to go with this?
You know, for myself and sort of as a field, there's several areas where I think that
we still need to do much better work.
So Coggy Beaver therapy is a highly efficacious.
treatment. And I think that most people would agree that it's kind of the best psychological
treatment that we have. But that being said, not everybody benefits from this therapy. And
for those that do benefit, we oftentimes see a relapse or a return of symptoms. So our therapy is good,
but it's clearly not great. And so I think that's one of the areas where we really need to sort of
figure out what are the factors even before somebody starts therapy that can tell us who's really
going to benefit? And for those who we know beforehand, they're not going to fully benefit,
well, what do we do with those individuals? How do we help those individuals? So this question of
prognostic indicators, I think is a really important question moving forward. Similarly,
you know, I think the question of kind of going back to your question about medication,
you know, I do think that medication can be a good therapy for some people, but not for everyone.
And I think the question is, you know, what are the prescriptive indicators?
That is, what are the things that I can have in my hands before a person starts therapy that will tell me, oh, you know what?
Given these factors, that person should get cognitive therapy or given these factors, that person really should get medication.
So having these prognostic and prescriptive indicators and then trying to figure out how do we implement them and trying to figure out who's going to benefit even before they start, I think is a really important future direction.
The other area is just one of dissemination, right?
I mean, we have this good therapy, but not everyone has access to it, right?
Not everyone can afford it.
And I think these issues of, you know, that question is kind of a larger question just in terms of our health care system.
system, right? But really giving people access to this therapy, I think is really that sort of the
next frontiers. How do we get this out there to the masses so people can access it? Well, Dr. Olatunji,
this has been really interesting. I hope our listeners have found some of this helpful. I appreciate
you joining us today. Thank you. Well, thank you for your time. I really enjoyed it.
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Thank you for listening.
For the American Psychological Association, I'm Kim.
Mills.
