Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT)
CBT is the most well-evidenced treatment for somatic symptom disorder and is considered the first-line psychological approach. It works by helping you identify and change the thought patterns and behaviours that are keeping your distress going.
In CBT for SSD, your therapist might work with you on:
- Challenging catastrophic thinking: Learning to examine whether your interpretation of physical sensations is accurate or exaggerated.
- Behavioural activation: Gradually reintroducing activities you may have been avoiding out of fear that they would worsen your symptoms.
- Stress management: Developing practical tools to manage day-to-day stress, since stress is known to amplify physical symptoms.
- Activity pacing: Finding a sustainable balance between rest and movement, rather than swinging between overdoing things and complete rest.
CBT is typically delivered over several weeks, and outcomes improve the more consistently you engage with the process.
Mindfulness-Based Therapy
Mindfulness-based approaches help you develop a different relationship with physical sensations. Rather than reacting to every symptom with alarm, you learn to observe what you are experiencing without immediately judging it as dangerous. This can significantly reduce the anxiety that feeds somatic symptom disorder.
Mindfulness is often integrated into CBT, but it can also be offered as a standalone approach, particularly through programmes like Mindfulness-Based Cognitive Therapy (MBCT).
Medication
Medication does not treat somatic symptom disorder directly, but it can be very effective for managing the co-occurring conditions that often accompany it, particularly anxiety and depression.
Commonly used medications include:
- SSRIs (selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors): These are often the first medication considered, as they address both anxiety and low mood.
Any medication should be prescribed and monitored by a psychiatrist, particularly where there are co-occurring conditions involved.
Lifestyle and Ongoing Support
Beyond formal therapy and medication, several ongoing habits support recovery from SSD:
- Maintaining a single primary care relationship: Seeing one trusted doctor rather than multiple providers reduces unnecessary investigations and builds a stable, supportive therapeutic alliance.
- Regular follow-up appointments: Consistent, scheduled check-ins with your doctor help manage symptoms without reactive, crisis-driven visits.
- Physical activity: Gentle, regular movement helps regulate both mood and physical discomfort.
- Sleep hygiene: Poor sleep amplifies pain and anxiety, so maintaining consistent sleep habits is a meaningful part of somatic symptom disorder treatment.
- Family involvement: Family members benefit from understanding SSD so they can offer appropriate support without unintentionally reinforcing health-focused behaviours.