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How Cognitive Biases can Intensify Health Anxiety

How Cognitive Biases can Intensify Health Anxiety

Memory biases are one of the cognitive factors that contribute to health anxiety. One type of memory bias responsible for maintaining health anxiety is selective memory. Maybe there was one time or a couple of times that you (or someone you know) were right about a symptom. The symptom was, in fact, due to an actual health concern. Of course, that stands out in your head right? Those moments are particularly memorable. And now, anytime a new symptom emerges, you think, well, that one time I was right about the symptom or well, that one time Sally was right about that symptom.

Before we continue, if you want to take the first step to improve health anxiety, grab my free guide! 

Improve health anxiety with cognitive behavioral therapy

Meanwhile, it is so easy to forget about all of the other times that you had symptoms or bodily sensations and they were simply due to benign body noise. Those situations just come and go and we don't even bother to retain that information. Instead of remembering the countless 'body noise' situations, we hyper focus on the one or two situations that we had a symptom and it ended up being a real health issue or something serious.

This process actually further reinforces our "threat bias." In other words, health-anxious people already tend to overestimate the probability and severity of getting a disease. This memory bias further reinforces these beliefs and makes us even more likely to overestimate the probability and severity of serious disease.

This is why it can be really helpful to track your anxious thoughts about your health in a thought record, so you can then look back and see just how often you were correct (or incorrect) about your symptoms and what you thought your symptoms meant. This way, you can keep track of the data and see it all more accurately. I want to become a scientist and learn to study and analyze your thoughts and outcomes or "data."

Your Homework

1. The next time you have a symptom, I want you to ask yourself: how many times have I assumed the symptom was due to some serious disease when it was actually just random body noise, anxiety or a benign or minor health condition?

2. Start tracking your thoughts about your symptom, and their outcomes, in the a thought record. This will help you to gain some insight into any patterns you have. Namely, the pattern of focusing on the one or more times you did have a serious health issue and ignoring all the times your thoughts about the symptom were wrong. Below is an example of how you can track your symptoms, thoughts and outcomes. Give it a try. Track all of this for 2 weeks and then take a look at the data.

Thought record to improve health anxiety

Try it out! Track all of this for 2 weeks and then take a look at the data. How many times were you accurate? How many times were you inaccurate? 

If you want to take the next step to improve health anxiety, grab my free guide! 

Improve health anxiety with cognitive behavioral therapy

 

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