Aichmophobia is the fear of knives, needles, or other sharp, pointed objects. The cause for this fear is not readily known. One theory is that the aichmophobic has a stressful relationship with someone, and may fear losing control or destruction.
To add insult to an already distressing condition, most aichmophobia therapies take months or years and sometimes even require the patient to be exposed repeatedly to their fear.
aichmophobia will likely cost you tens, even hundreds of thousands of dollars over the course of your lifetime, let alone the cost to your health and quality of life.
1: aichmophobia: a persistent, abnormal, and unwarranted fear of needles, pins, or pointed objects, despite the understanding by the phobic individual and reassurance by others that there is no danger.
In general, the medical profession is not terribly sympathetic to aichmophobia.
While there is probably a touch of aichmophobia in all humans, most of us tough it out, look the other way or think of something else when we get shots, and we get through it without a lot of fuss.
Lamb, who runs a Web site for people with aichmophobia, disagrees that it is an inherited trait: "Needle-phobes are made, not born," he said.