ChatterBank5 mins ago
panic attacks in children
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No best answer has yet been selected by juju74. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think they are Anxiety attacks. Panic attacks can happen anywhere at anytime but Anxiety attacks are brought on by a certain situation. Once he is out of a worrying situation does he calm down?
If you take him to the doctors for Gods sake don't let them put him on pills. He will rely on them and think that they cure him even though they will just space him out. Teach him he is strong enough to over come this. I was recently having Anxiety attacks but with help from Hypnotherapy they have stopped. I feel 100% better and I am so glad I never took the pills offered to me many times by my doctor.
My brother is 15 and when he was about 14 he wasn't well at school oneday and he threw up in class. Ever since then whenever he went to school he was worried he was going to be sick. He would say he felt sick everyday for ages but he was making himself feel that way through Anxiety. The doctors gave him some stuff to control stomach acid but thats not what he needed and it didn't do anything for him. He over came it himself by going out with friends and going to school and coming home each day a little more cofident that he wasn't sick.
I hope your son is able to get over this as its a total mind thing. The brain is a powerful tool and it can make you believe anything. It can make grown men think they are having heart attacks. If you are worried about a sympton then the chances are the more you worry, the more you will feel like you have it.
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Bach Rescue remedy works and so does Nelsons Aconite 30c's. They are herbal remedies and won't have anything other than a calming affect on him. They can be bought at Boots or large chemists.
When he is having an attacks try and get him to do breathing exercises. Breath in slowly for 4 seconds, hold it for 4 seconds and then breathe out for 4 seconds. Do this for a few mins to get the oxygen flowing round the body. Also a brown paper bag to breath into or get him to count back from 50 to 0. Anything to take his mind of it and it will surely pass.
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Things that I have found to help espicially at night.
Nothing too heavy in terms of computer games or TV late in the evening.
Lots of cuddles and reasurance that all is well.
Listening and allowing for calming down time but try not to let the situation decend any lower.
If it is late steering the conversation to happy events. Like looking at something really positive that he has achieved or done in the day, week, year. Anything like "that was a brilliant bit of "schoolwork"/art/ olli on your skateboard /swimming /cooking you did today" "I was so proud were you pleased?" You will know what your child will respond to and if you dont try a few and you will get to know.
Finally I agree that many children get a great deal out of some councilling. My son ocassionally sees one for other issues and it really helps.
Oh and his panic attacks which were a few a week, are now so few and far between last one well over a month ago and many months the one before! With lots of love support and reassurance you will make a difference.
Best of luck