Emetophobia Glossary of Terms
Key Terms for Understanding and Treating the Fear of Vomiting
Key terms related to emetophobia, the fear of vomiting, and its treatment.
Emetophobia-Specific Terms
Emetophobia — An intense, persistent fear of vomiting — oneself vomiting, seeing others vomit, or being in situations where vomiting might occur. One of the most common specific phobias, affecting 3-6% of the population.
Specific Phobia (DSM-5-TR) — A category of anxiety disorders involving excessive fear of a specific object or situation. Emetophobia falls under the “other type” subtype.
Exposure Hierarchy — A ranked list of feared vomiting-related situations from least to most anxiety-provoking, used to guide gradual exposure therapy. Also called a fear ladder.
Interoceptive Exposure — A therapeutic technique that deliberately induces physical sensations resembling nausea (spinning, breathing through a straw) to build tolerance. Critical for emetophobia because many sufferers fear nausea itself.
Safety Behaviors — Actions taken to prevent or reduce the feared outcome, such as carrying anti-nausea medication, avoiding certain foods, or excessive handwashing. These maintain the phobia by preventing disconfirmation of feared beliefs.
Avoidance Patterns — Behavioral responses where the person actively avoids situations that might trigger nausea or vomiting, including restaurants, public transport, travel, pregnancy, and certain foods.
Treatment Terms
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) — Evidence-based psychotherapy that identifies and changes unhelpful thought patterns and behaviors. First-line treatment for emetophobia.
Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP) — A form of CBT involving gradual, systematic exposure to feared stimuli (vomiting-related images, sounds, situations) while preventing safety behaviors. Gold standard for phobias.
Cognitive Restructuring — A CBT technique for identifying and challenging catastrophic thoughts about vomiting (e.g., “If I vomit, I will lose control”).
Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) — A psychotherapy approach focusing on accepting uncomfortable thoughts and feelings about vomiting rather than fighting them, while taking action aligned with personal values.
EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) — A therapy using bilateral stimulation to process traumatic memories. Used when emetophobia has a specific traumatic vomiting origin.
Habituation — The natural decrease in anxiety that occurs with repeated, prolonged exposure to a feared stimulus. The mechanism behind exposure therapy.
Bibliotherapy — Self-directed treatment using books and workbooks based on therapeutic principles. Can be effective for mild to moderate emetophobia.
General Anxiety Terms
Anxiety Sensitivity — The fear of anxiety-related sensations themselves (rapid heartbeat, nausea, dizziness). High anxiety sensitivity is common in emetophobia.
Fight-or-Flight Response — The body’s automatic stress response, which can include nausea, stomach upset, and other GI symptoms that mimic the feared vomiting experience.
Panic Attack — A sudden surge of intense fear accompanied by physical symptoms. In emetophobia, the fear of vomiting can trigger panic attacks, which can cause nausea, creating a vicious cycle.
Related Resources
Ready to Take the Next Step?
Get comprehensive guidance with Emetophobia Handbook.