Now, a pill that could cure your fears
Published: March 28, 2006
Now, facing your fears may not be such a difficult thing after all, for a Swiss-led research team has developed a treatment that could help people overcome their fears simply by popping a pill before facing a stressful situation.
The treatment, which contains a human hormone called cortisol that the body produces naturally in times of stress or fear to help subdue the panic response, tested 40 people with social phobia and 20 with a fear of spiders.
The researchers, led by Dominique de Quervain of the University of Zurich gave half of volunteers cortisol and then, an hour later, made them give a presentation and undergo an impromptu maths test, or to view a picture of a large spider.
They found that volunteers who had taken cortisol reported significantly less fear, on a scale of 0 to 10, than those given a placebo.
Thus finding that artificially increasing levels of cortisol can indeed help phobics overcome the paralysing fear, that they feel when faced with the source of their anxiety.
Dominique de Quervain said that though the treatment would never become a daily pill, it could prove beneficial when combined with behavioural therapy.
“This will never be a daily pill. But it could be used in combination with behavioural therapy,” Nature quoted him, as saying.
The study is published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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