Patients with social phobia (social anxiety disorder) have a fear of being scrutinized, ridiculed or humiliated by other people.
In generalised social phobia the patient will avoid all contact with people outside the family circle. Other patients have phobia which are more focussed, for example, fears concerning:
Although worries about some of these situations are common in the general population, people with social anxiety disorder worry excessively about them at the time and before and afterwards
Symptoms usually begin in adolescence and may result in underperformance at school and work
Estimates of lifetime prevalence vary but according to a US study, 12% of adults in the US will have social anxiety disorder at some point in their lives, compared with estimates of around 6% for generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), 5% for panic disorder, 7% for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and 2% for obsessive-compulsive disorder
There is a significant degree of comorbidity between social anxiety disorder and other mental health problems, most notably depression (19%), substance-use disorder (17%), GAD (5%), panic disorder (6%), and PTSD (3%).
Social anxiety disorder has an early median age of onset (13 years) and is one of the most persistent anxiety disorders
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