
Heart attack or panic attack? Unmanaged anxiety forcing youngsters to call ambulance
This has serious consequences. Our latest research shows young men are turning to ambulance services when their symptoms become overwhelming – some even think they're having a heart attack. So why do so many men wait until they need to call emergency services, rather than seek support earlier from a GP or psychologist? And what prompts them to call? We reviewed the paramedic notes of 694 men aged 15 to 25 years in Victoria, Australia, to find out. Young men haven't seen others asking for help. Boys are raised to value courage, strength and self-assurance, and to suppress vulnerability. When parents encourage boys to 'face their fears', rather than offering emotional comfort and tenderness, anxiety gets positioned in conflict with masculinity. This leads to a disjuncture between the support young men are met with (and come to expect) from others, and the support they may want or need.
This also means that boys grow up believing their male role models – dads, brothers, grandads, coaches advising them not to get anxious and deter boys and men from seeking help. As a result, anxiety goes undiagnosed and opportunities for early intervention are missed.
Recently, we have seen positive shifts challenging restrictive masculine stereotypes. This has improved awareness surrounding men's depression – starting conversations, normalising help-seeking and leading to the development of men's mental health programs and resources. However, men's anxiety remains in the shadows.
When anxiety is talked about, it's not with the same weight or concern as depression. This is despite men's anxiety having harmful health impacts including turning to alcohol and drugs to cope and increasing the risk of male suicide. What does anxiety look like? When men are encouraged to talk about anxiety, they describe various challenges including repetitive worries, feeling out-of-control and intense physical symptoms. This includes a high heart rate, shortness of breath, body pains, tremors and headaches.
Jack Steele, a prominent Australian personality, opened up about his anxiety difficulties on The Imperfects Podcast last year saying: 'I didn't know what anxiety was. I thought I was the opposite of anxiety. The way I explain it, it's like your whole body just shuts down. My throat starts closing and my whole body just goes numb. […] It feels like you're just so alone. You feel like no-one can help you. You genuinely think the world's ending – like there's no way out.' These physical symptoms are common in men but can be frequently dismissed rather than recognised as anxiety. Our research has found that, when left unaddressed, these symptoms typically worsen and arise in more and more contexts. Why do anxious men call ambulances?
Our new study investigated the consequences of men's anxiety going unaddressed. First, we used data from the National Ambulance Surveillance System to identify and describe the types of anxiety young men experience. We then looked at the characteristics and contexts of young men's anxiety presentations to ambulance services. Overwhelmed and lacking support, many young men turn to ambulances in crisis. Anxiety now accounts for 10 per cent of male ambulance attendances for mental health concerns, surpassing depression and psychosis. While every presentation is different, our study identified three common presentations among young men: 1. Sudden onset of intense bodily symptoms resembling life-threatening physical health conditions such as heart attacks. Twenty-two-year-old Joshua, for example, whose case files we reviewed as part of our study, was on a tram home from work when he experienced sudden numbness in his hands and feet. A bystander saw he was having muscle spasms in his hands. Joshua was alert but extremely anxious and asked the bystander for help.
2. Severe anxiety triggered or worsened by substance use. Adam, a 21-year-old man, consumed a substantial amount of diazepam (Valium) while driving home, after having an anxiety attack at work. Adam reached out to paramedics because he was concerned his anxiety symptoms hadn't dissipated, and was worried he may have taken too much diazepam.
3. Mental health deterioration with self-harm or suicidal thoughts, often tied to situational stressors such as unstable housing, unemployment, financial difficulties and relationship strain. Leo, aged 25, had been increasingly anxious for the past three days. Leo's parents called an ambulance after he told them he wanted to kill himself. Leo told paramedics on arrival that he still felt suicidal and had been getting worse over the past three months.
Young men's anxiety presentations are time- and resource-intensive for paramedics, many of whom feel poorly equipped to respond effectively. After ruling out physical causes, paramedic support is typically limited to reassurance and breathing techniques. Most young men are then instructed to follow up with GPs, psychologists or other health professionals in the general community.
But taking that next step involves overcoming the stigma associated with help-seeking, the shame of having called an ambulance and deep tensions between anxiety and what it means to be a man. This means many young men slip through the cracks. And without ongoing mental health support, they face high risks of presenting again to emergency services with increasingly severe mental health symptoms.
To address this, we need to: -ramp up conversations about men's anxiety and take their experiences seriously -develop an awareness campaign about men's anxiety. Awareness campaigns have successfully dismantled stigma and shed light on men's depression and suicide -improve diagnosis of men's anxiety disorders by up-skilling and training clinicians to detect anxiety and the unique and distinct constellations of symptoms in men -create accessible pathways to early support through digital psychological education resources, focused on improving awareness and literacy surrounding men's anxiety experiences. (Dan Lubman is associated with Monash University.
The co-writers Krista Fisher, Simon Rice and Zac Seidler are from the University of Melbourne)

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