Amplification and Attribution Styles in Somatoform and Depressive Disorders – A Study from Bangalore, India

Objective: The present investigation aimed to study attribution styles and somatosensory amplification among patients suffering from somatoform and depressive disorders. Methods: Two groups of 30 patients with diagnoses of somatoform disorder and depressive disorder, respectively (ICD-10 DCR), and o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychopathology 2003-03, Vol.36 (2), p.98-103
Hauptverfasser: Duddu, V., Chaturvedi, S.K., Isaac, M.K.
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Isaac, M.K.
description Objective: The present investigation aimed to study attribution styles and somatosensory amplification among patients suffering from somatoform and depressive disorders. Methods: Two groups of 30 patients with diagnoses of somatoform disorder and depressive disorder, respectively (ICD-10 DCR), and one group of 30 normal controls were recruited. The study patients were assessed using the symptom interpretation questionnaire, somatosensory amplification scale, and scales for assessing alexithymia and illness attitudes. Results: The somatoform and depressive disorder patients had greater recent symptom experience than the normal group. The somatoform disorder group had higher somatic attribution scores, the depressive disorder sample had higher psychological attribution scores, and the normal group had higher normalizing attribution scores than the two other groups. Somatoform disorder patients had higher mean amplification scores than depressed patients, who in turn had higher scores than normals. Correlation analyses showed somatic attribution and certain illness attitudes to be closely associated in all three groups. Recent symptom experience was associated with amplification in the somatoform disorder group alone. Recent symptom experience, a diagnosis of somatoform disorder and lower normalizing attribution scores predicted amplification. Discussion: These findings indicate that somatoform and depressive disorder patients and normals differ from each other in their attribution styles. There is a clustering of attributes among somatoform disorder patients that include greater symptom experience, which is somatically attributed, and is associated with excessive illness worry, concern and preoccupation with bodily symptoms, and a fear of having or developing a disease. On the other hand, depressed patients and normal subjects who do have a somatic attribution style (though, as a group, they have lower somatic attribution scores than the somatoform disorder group), also harbor hypochondriacal beliefs and related attitudes.
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Recent symptom experience was associated with amplification in the somatoform disorder group alone. Recent symptom experience, a diagnosis of somatoform disorder and lower normalizing attribution scores predicted amplification. Discussion: These findings indicate that somatoform and depressive disorder patients and normals differ from each other in their attribution styles. There is a clustering of attributes among somatoform disorder patients that include greater symptom experience, which is somatically attributed, and is associated with excessive illness worry, concern and preoccupation with bodily symptoms, and a fear of having or developing a disease. 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Recent symptom experience was associated with amplification in the somatoform disorder group alone. Recent symptom experience, a diagnosis of somatoform disorder and lower normalizing attribution scores predicted amplification. Discussion: These findings indicate that somatoform and depressive disorder patients and normals differ from each other in their attribution styles. There is a clustering of attributes among somatoform disorder patients that include greater symptom experience, which is somatically attributed, and is associated with excessive illness worry, concern and preoccupation with bodily symptoms, and a fear of having or developing a disease. 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subjects Adult
Adult and adolescent clinical studies
Biological and medical sciences
Catchment Area (Health)
Depression
Depressive Disorder - diagnosis
Depressive Disorder - epidemiology
Depressive Disorder - ethnology
Educational Status
Female
Humans
Incidence
India
Male
Medical sciences
Mood disorders
Original Paper
Pain - diagnosis
Pain - epidemiology
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Religion
Socioeconomic Factors
Somatoform Disorders - diagnosis
Somatoform Disorders - epidemiology
Somatoform Disorders - ethnology
Somatoform disorders. Psychosomatics
Tropical medicine
title Amplification and Attribution Styles in Somatoform and Depressive Disorders – A Study from Bangalore, India
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