About 6-15 anxiety disorder patients are normally treated at the same time in an anxiety group therapy, contrary to consulting a therapist individually. Anyhow, dealing with anxiety in group therapy has some benefits, but disadvantages as well.

Because all the participants in a group have the same disorder experienced themselves, which will give the individual a more comfortable feeling. He or she will soon begin to realize that their problem is not an isolated one. Once they realize that there are other people in identical situations, it can become life-affirming for them, especially if the anxiety disorder makes them imagine that they are some type of an outsider or being a “freak” or being different from, and for that reason inferior to the majority of society.

One of the great advantages of anxiety group therapy is the input of the experience the fellow patients have. It can help in discovering answers to everyone’s problems. A therapist might not have established that by him- or herself.

The patient, when learning coping skills like the ones learned through cognitive anxiety therapy, can benefit from understandings based on shared experiences of a situation which causes anxiety, suggested by the patient’s group members.

The comfortof being in a group setting lessens anxiety and can relax the patient. It stimulates the individual to speak about goals, ambitions and likely solutions to the problems that is the source of the anxiety disorder. This a great advantage of anxiety group therapy over individual treatments.

Unfortunately there are some clear disadvantages that anxiety group therapy has over personalized treatment. Because it is a group setting, the therapist could be limited to approach the participants just in general, contrary to tailored solutions required by each patient’s needs. Additionally, these settings might limit the time the therapist can find to deal with everyone’s distinctive problem appropriately. This can cause a feeling of being lost in the crowd.

Because of this reason, group anxiety therapy programs are usually run in conjunction with individual sessions with a health care professional. Each patient is taken out of the group for a specific time each day to get his or her own advice by a therapist or a licensed counselor. Themes that cannot be appropriately handled in a group setting are discussed there, such as the individual’s medication. Both, anxiety group therapy and individual therapy together will insure that all the patient’s needs are met.

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