Perceived emotion regulation and emotional distress tolerance in patients with hoarding disorder.

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ID: 158043
2019
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Abstract
Emotional distress tolerance (EDT) and emotion regulation (ER) appear to be highly relevant to hoarding pathology, as excessive saving and/or acquiring may be motivated by emotional avoidance or other attempts to regulate negative affect. While findings with nonclinical samples have suggested and EDT/ER predicts hoarding symptoms, there is little data on clinical samples. The aim of the current study was to examine several self-report measures of EDT and ER in individuals with HD ( = 87) and age-matched nonclinical controls ( = 46), and to explore whether this was predictive of treatment compliance and/or outcome in group CBT for HD. Results suggested that, the Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS; Gratz & Roemer, 2004) total score, DERS goals and awareness subscales, and Intolerance of Uncertainty Scale (IUS; Buhr & Dugas, 2002) were predictive of hoarding severity. However, EDT/ER did not change with treatment, did not mediate treatment outcome, and did not predicted treatment retention, compliance, or outcome. Results suggest that some EDT/ER constructs, such as uncertainty intolerance, difficulty persisting in goal behaviors when upset, and low emotional awareness, may explain significant variance in HD symptoms, although they did not appear to be mechanisms of change in CBT for HD.
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worden2019perceivedjournal Use this key to autocite in the manuscript while using SciMatic Manuscript Manager or Thesis Manager
Authors Worden, Blaise;Levy, Hannah C;Das, Akanksha;Katz, Benjamin W;Stevens, Michael;Tolin, David F;
Journal journal of obsessive-compulsive and related disorders
Year 2019
DOI
100441
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