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Chaetophobia redirect. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
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The validly sourced content below is general content about specific phobias; it is not about this condition in particular. The content that is about this phobia is sourced to popular media, which we absolutely do not use for content about health per WP:MEDRS. We don't do duplicate general sections in specific articles like this anywhere in WP, and certainly not articles about health. It is a recipe for disaster and just pads this article.
As with most phobias this fear could be the result of a negative experience with hair, a hairy person, or no reason at all; at times, the fear is idiopathic, without any known obvious causation. [1] Because of this lack of clear causation, some critics of psychoanalysis are concerned with over-diagnosis. [2]
There are many theories of causation of such phobias: a popular book on psychological disorders suggests that phobias such as trichophobia or chaetophobia come from overactive imaginations, or otherwise from an amygdala hijack; difficult to determine their roots, they often start in early childhood. [3]
One theory on the cause is that Christian people in medieval Europe associated hair with the devil. [4] Another idea is that hair is representative of the female, and thus the fear of hair is fear of women. [5] [6] Marketers of depilatory products encourage fear of body hair in women for their own profit. [7]
On the other hand, a "predisposition to anxiety" is thought to turn into a phobia by "a traumatic experience", or "learned off others who may instill their fears in you", or "observation or 'systemic modelling'". [8]
Intensive therapy and/or medication may have an effect on the anxiety side of the phobia. As with most phobias support groups and self relaxation techniques are some times effective in helping with fear and anxiety. [1]
Common treatments, as with all phobias, include " behavioral or talk therapy", drugs, and nutritional therapy. [3] Exposure therapy is also commonly used, [1] and can be effective in 85% of cases. [8]
References
How
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).-- Jytdog ( talk) (signed on Jytdog's behalf by —PermStrump (talk) 23:57, 26 August 2016 (UTC))
The American DSM uses code 300.29 for specific phobias. [1]Neither the DSM nor these 2 sources mention the term "chaetophobia", but that sentence implied that chaetophobia is an accepted term for a type of specific phobia, which I haven't found any evidence of.
References
This is the
talk page for discussing improvements to the
Chaetophobia redirect. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
Article policies
|
Find sources: Google ( books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
![]() | This article was nominated for deletion on 23 August 2016. The result of the discussion was redirect to List of phobias. |
![]() | This redirect does not require a rating on Wikipedia's
content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | |||||||
|
The validly sourced content below is general content about specific phobias; it is not about this condition in particular. The content that is about this phobia is sourced to popular media, which we absolutely do not use for content about health per WP:MEDRS. We don't do duplicate general sections in specific articles like this anywhere in WP, and certainly not articles about health. It is a recipe for disaster and just pads this article.
As with most phobias this fear could be the result of a negative experience with hair, a hairy person, or no reason at all; at times, the fear is idiopathic, without any known obvious causation. [1] Because of this lack of clear causation, some critics of psychoanalysis are concerned with over-diagnosis. [2]
There are many theories of causation of such phobias: a popular book on psychological disorders suggests that phobias such as trichophobia or chaetophobia come from overactive imaginations, or otherwise from an amygdala hijack; difficult to determine their roots, they often start in early childhood. [3]
One theory on the cause is that Christian people in medieval Europe associated hair with the devil. [4] Another idea is that hair is representative of the female, and thus the fear of hair is fear of women. [5] [6] Marketers of depilatory products encourage fear of body hair in women for their own profit. [7]
On the other hand, a "predisposition to anxiety" is thought to turn into a phobia by "a traumatic experience", or "learned off others who may instill their fears in you", or "observation or 'systemic modelling'". [8]
Intensive therapy and/or medication may have an effect on the anxiety side of the phobia. As with most phobias support groups and self relaxation techniques are some times effective in helping with fear and anxiety. [1]
Common treatments, as with all phobias, include " behavioral or talk therapy", drugs, and nutritional therapy. [3] Exposure therapy is also commonly used, [1] and can be effective in 85% of cases. [8]
References
How
was invoked but never defined (see the
help page).-- Jytdog ( talk) (signed on Jytdog's behalf by —PermStrump (talk) 23:57, 26 August 2016 (UTC))
The American DSM uses code 300.29 for specific phobias. [1]Neither the DSM nor these 2 sources mention the term "chaetophobia", but that sentence implied that chaetophobia is an accepted term for a type of specific phobia, which I haven't found any evidence of.
References