Health Anxiety & the Internet
Searching symptoms online promises answers but usually delivers worst-case fears. This guide explains 'cyberchondria' and offers a kinder, healthier relationship with the search bar.
Why online searching makes health anxiety worse, how algorithms amplify fear, the urge to look 'just once more', and practical ways to step back.
What's inside
- →The search spiral — worst-case first
- →Why it backfires — fear amplified
- →'Just once more' — the pull
- →Healthier limits — practical steps
- →Trusted sources — when you do look
- →Redirecting — toward calm
For educational purposes only
This guide is educational and supportive information about health anxiety — it is not medical or mental-health advice, diagnosis, or treatment, and it is not a substitute for care from a qualified professional. Health anxiety is common and very treatable, and a doctor or therapist (cognitive behavioural therapy can be especially helpful) can make a real difference. This guide does not diagnose or rule out any physical condition: if you have new or concerning physical symptoms, it's wise to have them assessed once by a doctor rather than repeatedly seeking reassurance. If anxiety feels overwhelming or you are in distress, please reach out — call or text 988 (US Suicide & Crisis Lifeline); in an emergency, call 911.