Shame and defectiveness beliefs in treatment seeking patients with body dysmorphic disorder Article

Weingarden, H, Shaw, AM, Phillips, KA et al. (2018). Shame and defectiveness beliefs in treatment seeking patients with body dysmorphic disorder . 206(6), 417-422. 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000808

cited authors

  • Weingarden, H; Shaw, AM; Phillips, KA; Wilhelm, S

authors

abstract

  • Shame is a distressing emotion experienced when individuals judge themselves in a broadly negative and critical manner. Clinical descriptions of body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) emphasize the centrality of shame, yet research on shame in BDD remains scarce. This study is the largest investigation of shame in clinically diagnosed individualswith BDD, and it is the first to examine whether shame changes with treatment. Eighty-three adults with BDD were treated with 14 weeks of open-label escitalopram. Shame was measured using the Young Schema Questionnaire-Short Form. Shame was significantly higher in individuals with BDD than in previously reported healthy control and psychiatric outpatient samples. Shame was significantly, moderately correlated with greater suicidal thoughts and hopelessness and marginally significantly correlated with greater BDD severity. Shame decreased significantly with treatment. Reductions in shame with escitalopram were significantly associated with reductions in suicidal thoughts and hopelessness, even when accounting for reductions in BDD and depression severity.

publication date

  • June 1, 2018

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • 417

end page

  • 422

volume

  • 206

issue

  • 6