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Normalizing attributions may contribute to non-help-seeking behavior in people with fibromyalgia syndrome.

June 30th, 2008 · No Comments

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Normalizing attributions may contribute to non-help-seeking behavior in people with fibromyalgia syndrome.

Psychosomatics. 2008 May-Jun;49(3):212-7

Authors: Gulec H

BACKGROUND: Causal attributions of bodily perceptions indicate the possibility of some degree of control over events. Therefore, attributions are important to support the social significance of experience and confer meaning. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study is to investigate whether non-patients with fibromyalgia (FMS) use more normalizing attributions than healthy control subjects and help-seeking patients. METHOD: Thirty-seven FMS patients attending tertiary care were compared with 38 non-patients and 34 healthy controls on mean anxiety, depression, attribution style, and alexithymia scores. RESULTS: Mean normalizing scores were greatest in the non-patient group, followed by the healthy-control group, and smallest in the tertiary-care attending group. Non-patients are using more normalizing explanations than the FMS patients and the healthy-control subjects. CONCLUSION: Thus, normalization may negatively influence help-seeking behavior and contribute to non-help-seeking behavior.

PMID: 18448775 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Tags: Psychosomatic Medicine · Psychosomatics