Self-Stigma and Etiological Attributions About Symptoms Among Individuals Diagnosed With an Anxiety Disorder: Relations With Symptom Severity and Symptom Improvement Following CBT

Author:

Lorona Rosemond T.1,Fergus Thomas A.1,Valentiner David P.2,Miller Lindsay M.2,McGrath Patrick B.3

Affiliation:

1. Baylor University.

2. Northern Illinois University.

3. OCD and Related Anxiety Disorders Program at Alexian Brothers Behavioral Health Hospital.

Abstract

Nearly one-third of individuals in the U.S. will be diagnosed with an anxiety disorder during their lifetime. Receiving that label can evoke self-stigma, with self-stigma relating to greater symptom severity and negatively impacting treatment outcomes. A lesser-studied variable related to self-stigma is etiological attributions about symptoms, including biological and psychological attributions. The current study examined interrelations among self-stigma, etiological attributions, and symptom severity among 213 individuals diagnosed with an anxiety disorder who completed a cognitive-behavioral treatment (CBT) program. How self-stigma and etiological attributions related to symptom improvement following the program was examined in a subset of participants. Etiological attributions and self-stigma shared positive associations with symptom severity. Regression analyses indicated that, when controlling for overlap among self-stigma and etiological attributions, psychological attributions emerged as particularly relevant for understanding symptom severity. Changes in self-stigma and attributions were positively associated with changes in symptom severity following the CBT program. Study implications are discussed.

Publisher

Guilford Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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1. For Love or for Business;Handbook of Research on Communication Strategies for Taboo Topics;2022-04-29

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