6533b7d8fe1ef96bd1269a3d

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Medically unexplained symptoms in children and adolescents: Illness-related self-concept and parental symptom evaluations

Stefanie M. JungmannMichael Witthöft

subject

MaleParents050103 clinical psychologyAdolescentSelf-conceptExperimental and Cognitive PsychologySomatic symptom disorderAnxiety03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineArts and Humanities (miscellaneous)medicineHumans0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesChildSomatoform Disorders05 social sciencesMedically unexplainedImplicit-association testCognitionmedicine.diseaseSelf Concept030227 psychiatryPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyMedically Unexplained SymptomsSymptom perceptionSymptom EvaluationsAnxietyFemaleSymptom Assessmentmedicine.symptomPsychologyClinical psychology

description

According to cognitive-behavioral models, illness-related symptom evaluations and self-concepts play a pivotal role in the development and maintenance of medically unexplained somatic symptoms (MUS). However, illness-related cognitions related to MUS have rarely been studied in children/adolescents and their parents.Seventy-eight children and adolescents (M = 14.2 years; 59% female) performed two versions of the Implicit Association Test (IAT) to measure the implicit illness-related and the implicit anxiety-related self-concept. Illness-related evaluations of unspecific symptoms were assessed via the Health Norms Sorting Task (HNST), and MUS as well as characteristics of somatic symptom disorder (SSD) via questionnaires.MUS were significantly positively associated with the explicit (r = 0.30, p  .01) and implicit illness-related self-concept (r = 0.24, p = .04), but not with the anxiety-related self-concept (r = 0.15, p = .18). The implicit illness-related self-concept explained incremental variance in MUS (ΔRSome measures have been adapted for childhood and adolescence, but validations on larger samples are still pending.A disorder-specific self-concept of being ill, as well as parental symptom evaluations, seem to play an essential role in MUS and health anxiety in childhood and adolescence. Due to the importance of the top-down processes found here, the findings are in line with current predictive coding models of somatic symptom perception.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbtep.2020.101565