Ornithophobia

Ornithophobia (from Greek ornitho, "bird") is the fear of birds. Sufferers would be uncomfortable being outdoors and seeing or hearing birds may make them dread, anxious, or panic depending on severity of one's phobia. Some ornithophobes may only fear certain birds, like vultures, hawks, eagles, and geese, while others may even fear house birds like parrots or parakeets.

There are causes of ornithophobia, such as letting birds in the house through opened windows. Other causes include folklore and movies that portray birds, like Alfred Hitchcock’s film The Birds and Edgar Allen Poe's poem The Raven, and even birds attacking rabbits on TV.

Some people refuse to eat in places where birds may be present because of the fear that birds can steel their food. Ornithophobes are afraid of birds preserved by in museums and other places. Still others are afraid of images, photos or even the feathers of birds. Physical symptoms of this phobia typically include breaking in cold sweat, trembling or shaking, screaming or crying, having an increased heart rate, freezing in place or attempting to flee at the sight of birds. Sufferers would stay inside the house at all times during the day with all the windows and shades closed. Ornithophobes may prefer to be nocturnal, meaning they sleep during the day and be active at night.

For people with severe symptoms of ornithophobia, tranquilizers or other medicine can be used to reduce the severity of the symptoms. Ornithophobia can be treated using, which is effective 90% of the times, and , which is another effective method. Ten to thirty sessions (depending on individual cases) may be used for exposing the person to his/her objects of fears. The patient is shown slides or images of birds or their feathers, taught to imagine approaching the birds until s/he gradually learns to cope without distress.