The distribution of somatic symptom disorder and bodily distress syndrome in general hospital outpatients in China: A multicenter cross-sectional study

To investigate the distribution of somatic symptom disorder (SSD) and bodily distress syndrome (BDS) and analyze the differences in psychosocial characteristics of patients with the two diagnoses. A total of 694 general hospital outpatients completed the diagnostic interviews for SSD and BDS, and a...

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Veröffentlicht in:General hospital psychiatry 2023-11, Vol.85, p.171-176
Hauptverfasser: Ma, Dandan, Cao, Jinya, Wei, Jing, Fritzsche, Kurt, Toussaint, Anne Christin, Li, Tao, Zhang, Lan, Zhang, Yaoyin, Chen, Hua, Wu, Heng, Ma, Xiquan, Li, Wentian, Ren, Jie, Lu, Wei, Leonhart, Rainer
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container_title General hospital psychiatry
container_volume 85
creator Ma, Dandan
Cao, Jinya
Wei, Jing
Fritzsche, Kurt
Toussaint, Anne Christin
Li, Tao
Zhang, Lan
Zhang, Yaoyin
Chen, Hua
Wu, Heng
Ma, Xiquan
Li, Wentian
Ren, Jie
Lu, Wei
Leonhart, Rainer
description To investigate the distribution of somatic symptom disorder (SSD) and bodily distress syndrome (BDS) and analyze the differences in psychosocial characteristics of patients with the two diagnoses. A total of 694 general hospital outpatients completed the diagnostic interviews for SSD and BDS, and a set of questionnaires evaluating their psychosocial characteristics. A secondary analysis of these data is done. SSD and BDS had a moderate overlap (kappa value = 0.43). Patients who fulfilled both SSD and BDS diagnosis showed significantly higher levels of symptom-related psychological distress (SSD-12), somatic symptom severity (PHQ-15), depression (PHQ-9), and general anxiety (GAD-7), as well as lower mental and physical quality of life (SF-12) compared to patients with neither diagnosis and patients with only one diagnosis. Patients with either diagnosis were associated with significantly higher psychosocial impairments as compared to those with neither diagnosis. Patients who only met SSD had higher SSD-12 scores, whereas those with only BDS had higher PHQ-15 scores (p
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2023.10.017
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A total of 694 general hospital outpatients completed the diagnostic interviews for SSD and BDS, and a set of questionnaires evaluating their psychosocial characteristics. A secondary analysis of these data is done. SSD and BDS had a moderate overlap (kappa value = 0.43). Patients who fulfilled both SSD and BDS diagnosis showed significantly higher levels of symptom-related psychological distress (SSD-12), somatic symptom severity (PHQ-15), depression (PHQ-9), and general anxiety (GAD-7), as well as lower mental and physical quality of life (SF-12) compared to patients with neither diagnosis and patients with only one diagnosis. Patients with either diagnosis were associated with significantly higher psychosocial impairments as compared to those with neither diagnosis. Patients who only met SSD had higher SSD-12 scores, whereas those with only BDS had higher PHQ-15 scores (p&lt;0.001). 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SSD and BDS appear to represent somewhat different psychopathologies, with SSD more associated with psychological distress and BDS associated with greater experience of somatic symptoms. 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subjects China - epidemiology
Cross-Sectional Studies
Hospitals, General
Humans
Medically Unexplained Symptoms
Outpatients
Quality of Life - psychology
Somatoform Disorders - diagnosis
Surveys and Questionnaires
title The distribution of somatic symptom disorder and bodily distress syndrome in general hospital outpatients in China: A multicenter cross-sectional study
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