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Managing Anxiety in People with Autism: A Treatment Guide for Parents, Teachers, and Mental Health Professionals

RRP - $35.91   Our Price - $34.5  Paperback
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Anne M Chalfant Australian author

  • Managing Anxiety in People with Autism
  • Managing Anxiety in People with Autism
    Drawing on her experience diagnosing and treating anxiety in ASD clients at the treatment centre she founded in Sydney, Dr. Chalfant explains anxiety disorders, how they affect people across the autism spectrum, and what interventions can help.

275 pages
2011
ISBN: 9781606130049

Anxiety is one of the biggest challenges facing people with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) and their families. They can experience anxiety in all areas of their lives; school, family, and social life; and it compounds the difficulties they already may have with communicating, interacting socially, and controlling their emotions. Managing Anxiety in People with Autism is one of the first books to provide practical information about dealing with anxiety in people with ASD.

Drawing on her experience diagnosing and treating anxiety in people with ASD at the treatment centre she founded in Sydney, Australia, Dr. Chalfant provides clear, understandable explanations of the different types of anxiety disorders, how they affect people across the autism spectrum, and what interventions can help. The book teaches parents:

  • to know how and why their child is prone to anxiety
  • to understand their role in their child's anxious behaviour
  • to recognise and respond to anxious behaviour appropriately

Case studies and research findings help to illustrate the author's points and clarify the causes and symptoms of anxious behaviour.

Managing Anxiety explains a range of different types of strategies that can help manage and treat anxiety in school, home, and clinical settings and takes into consideration the different roles people play in a child's or adult's life: parent, sibling, teacher, etc. Readers learn about ways to modify behaviour and/or the environment to indirectly reduce anxiety, as well as interventions, such as medication or psychotherapy, which deal with symptoms directly. The discussion of more formal interventions; psychotherapy, Cognitive Behaviour Therapy (CBT), and medication; show how these methods can target specific anxieties. Because anxiety is generally more common in parents and siblings of a child with ASD, the author also offers ways they too can reduce their symptoms.