Psychology Research and Behavior Management | 2019

“Was it real or did I imagine it?” Perfectionistic beliefs are associated with dissociative absorption and imaginative involvement in obsessive-compulsive disorder

 
 

Abstract


Background and objectives In the literature there are inconsistent data regarding the role of dissociation in OCD. No study explored the association between obsessive beliefs and dissociative symptoms in OCD. It is important to understand which clinical factors are related to dissociation in OCD as more severe dissociative symptoms, particularly absorption, have been found to be predictors of treatment non-response. In the present short report we describe the results of an exploratory study aimed to investigate the role of the obsessive beliefs as predictors of the different dissociative symptoms controlling for anxiety and OCD severity in a group of OCD patients. Methods Sixty treatment-seeking patients consecutively referred to psychiatric services were included (mean age=31.17 years, 53.30% females). The Dissociative Experiences Scale-II, the Obsessive Beliefs Questionnaire-46, the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale, and the Beck Anxiety Inventory were administered. Results Higher anxious symptoms predicted higher Dissociative Amnesia, Depersonalization/Derealization, and Absorption/Imaginative Involvement. Higher OCD severity predicted higher Dissociative Amnesia. More severe Perfectionism predicted higher Absorption/Imaginative Involvement. Conclusion Perfectionism in OCD patients may be associated with a higher tendency to absorption and imaginative involvement. Future research should explore whether a psychotherapeutic intervention on perfectionism might improve the outcomes of the OCD patients with higher absorption tendencies.

Volume 12
Pages 603 - 607
DOI 10.2147/PRBM.S212983
Language English
Journal Psychology Research and Behavior Management

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