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People
With Social Anxiety
Disorder Use Alcohol to Cope
People with social anxiety disorder
may use alcohol to help them cope with social situations and may
actually avoid social encounters where there is no alcohol available.
That conclusion comes from a study
in the December issue of Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental
Research.
People with social anxiety disorder
aren't merely shy. They are extremely uncomfortable with the thought
of being scrutinized and fear looking foolish to others.
"Social anxiety disorder can keep
people from enjoying social events and often interferes with their
jobs, especially when they are required to speak to a group as
part of their work," study author Suzanne E. Thomas, an assistant
professor of psychiatry at the Medical University of South Carolina,
says in a prepared statement.
"Besides avoiding situations where
they might be evaluated, many individuals with social anxiety
disorder (also) use alcohol to cope," Thomas adds.
The average lifetime prevalence
of alcoholism among people with social anxiety disorder is 20
percent, compared with 10 percent in the general population. That
means that one in five people with social anxiety disorder develops
alcoholism at some point.
This study included 46 people --
23 with high social anxiety and 23 control subjects who weren't
socially anxious. They were all asked about their use of alcohol
as a coping mechanism, whether they avoided social situations
where there was no alcohol, and the degree of relief they experienced
by drinking alcohol in social settings.
"We found that drinking to relieve
social discomfort was a common practice in both groups, but that
individuals with high levels of social anxiety use alcohol for
this purpose more often, and they would drink both in anticipation
of and during social situations," Thomas says.
"Also, more individuals with high
social anxiety avoid social situations if alcohol is not available.
Lastly, they experience greater relief from anxiety in social
situations than do individuals who are not anxious," she says.
More information
Here's where you can learn more
about anxiety
disorders.
Reference
Source 101
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