
pmid: 2245272
A self-report questionnaire completed by 177 out-patients showed that hypochondriasis and amplification had a zero-order correlation of 0.56, and in stepwise multiple regression amplification accounted for 31 % of the variance in hypochondriasis, after sociodemographic variables had been accounted for. Fears of ageing and death, and a childhood history of illness in the family, increased the R2 to 0.50. Amplification was more powerful in women than in men and was also a significant (although weaker) correlate of somatisation, explaining 12% of the variance. Somatisation also correlated with being female, the propensity to seek medical care, and a diminished sense of efficacy over one's health. Our findings are consistent with the possibility that somatosensory amplification occurs in hypochondriasis.
Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Male, Personality Tests, Attitude to Death, Adolescent, Psychometrics, Fear, Awareness, Middle Aged, Hypochondriasis, Diagnosis, Differential, Personality Development, MMPI, Humans, Female, Arousal, Somatoform Disorders, Aged
Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Male, Personality Tests, Attitude to Death, Adolescent, Psychometrics, Fear, Awareness, Middle Aged, Hypochondriasis, Diagnosis, Differential, Personality Development, MMPI, Humans, Female, Arousal, Somatoform Disorders, Aged
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