This term describes ongoing, excessive worry about having or developing a serious illness, even when tests are normal or symptoms are mild.
What is health anxiety?
This organ speeds up when we feel anxious, but a faster rate does not automatically mean a heart attack.
What is the heart (increased heart rate)?
This thinking trap turns a minor symptom into the worst possible outcome, such as ‘A headache means I definitely have a brain tumor.
What is catastrophizing?
Repeatedly checking your body for lumps, bumps, or changes is an example of this type of behavior that temporarily reduces anxiety but keeps the cycle going.
What is a safety behavior (or checking behavior)?
This awareness practice involves noticing thoughts, sensations, and emotions in the present moment without judgment.
What is mindfulness?
People with health anxiety often engage in three types of behaviors that keep anxiety going: checking, avoidance, and this type of repeated questioning of others.
What is reassurance-seeking?
Feeling light‑headed, sweaty, and shaky can be part of this survival response, even when there is no real external danger.
What is the fight‑or‑flight (anxiety) response?
This distortion uses ‘I feel, therefore it is,’ such as ‘I feel terrified, so this must be cancer.’
What is emotional reasoning?
Avoiding doctor appointments, tests, or even opening the patient portal because you fear bad news is an example of this common pattern.
What is avoidance?
This CBT strategy encourages gently questioning anxious thoughts by asking for facts that support and facts that go against the feared conclusion.
What is cognitive restructuring or checking the evidence for and against a thought?
This form of therapy, often abbreviated as CBT, is considered a first‑line treatment for health anxiety and focuses on changing thoughts and behaviors.
What is cognitive‑behavioral therapy?
This everyday sensation in the chest is often mistaken for a heart attack, but is frequently just muscle tension or anxiety‑related tightness.
What is chest tightness or chest discomfort?
This thinking trap cannot tolerate not knowing and demands 100% certainty about health, even when that isn’t realistic.
What is intolerance of uncertainty?
Calling or messaging loved ones or providers over and over to ask if a symptom is serious is an example of this anxiety‑maintaining behavior.
What is reassurance‑seeking?
Doing activities that matter to you, even while anxious, is called living according to your personal what?
What are values?
In health anxiety, this common online activity may bring short‑term relief but usually increases anxiety in the long run.
What is Googling symptoms or researching health online?
This description is often used for the body’s reaction in health anxiety, where the alarm system goes off even though there is no actual emergency.
What is a false alarm?
This distortion focuses only on information that supports the feared diagnosis and ignores evidence that points to a more benign explanation.
What is confirmation bias or selective attention to threat?
In the anxiety cycle, this temporary feeling right after a safety behavior makes the behavior feel rewarding, even though anxiety grows in the long term.
What is short‑term relief?
Gradually cutting back on checking, Googling, or asking for reassurance in order to learn that anxiety can rise and fall on its own is an example of this type of practice.
What is exposure or reducing safety behaviors (exposure with response prevention)?
This phrase describes the pattern where a person misreads normal bodily sensations as signs of a serious disease, leading to escalating anxiety and more checking.
What is misinterpretation of body sensations (or the health anxiety vicious cycle)?
This process happens when someone notices a harmless bodily sensation, interprets it as proof of severe illness, and becomes increasingly focused on it.
What is catastrophizing or misinterpreting normal sensations as serious illness?
This distortion sees things in all‑or‑nothing terms, such as ‘Either I’m perfectly healthy or I’m seriously ill,’ with nothing in between.
What is black‑and‑white (all‑or‑nothing) thinking?
Name the missing step: trigger (symptom or health cue) → scary thought → anxiety in the body → [this step] → short‑term relief → stronger anxiety over time.
What is engaging in a safety behavior (checking, Googling, or avoiding)?
Choosing one small, doable action that reflects what kind of person you want to be, rather than what your anxiety demands, is an example of this kind of step.
What is a values‑based action (or a small values‑driven experiment)?