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Roosevelt University Immature Defense Mechanisms, Somatization, and Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help: A Reinvestigation of the Psychoanalytic Theory of Somatization A Dissertation Submitted to The Faculty of the College of Arts and Science In Candidacy for the Degree of Doctor of Clinical Psychology By Brynne M. Mulloy Chicago, Illinois August 7, 2013 UMI Number: 3603774 All rights reserved INFORMATION TO ALL USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. UMI 3603774 Published by ProQuest LLC (2013). Copyright in the Dissertation held by the Author. Microform Edition © ProQuest LLC. All rights reserved. This work is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code ProQuest LLC. 789 East Eisenhower Parkway P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, MI 48106 - 1346 Approval Date of Oral Defense: August 7, 2013 Doctoral Project Committee Chair Name: Kimberly Dienes, Ph.D. Position: Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology Institution: Roosevelt University Committee Members Name: Catherine Campbell, Ph.D. Position: Associate Professor, Director of Training, M.A. and Psy.D. Programs Institution: Roosevelt University Name: Steven Kvaal, Ph.D. Position: Associate Professor Institution: Roosevelt University ii Acknowledgments First and foremost, I would like to thank my dissertation chair, Kimberly Dienes, Ph.D. My interest in psychodynamic research and practice was sparked by Dr. Dienes’s contagious enthusiasm. Without her, this dissertation topic would not have entered my mind. Throughout graduate school, Dr. Dienes has served as a mentor to me, and I look up to her. I also wish to thank my dissertation committee members, Steven Kvaal, Ph.D. and Catherine Campbell, Ph.D. Both Dr. Campbell and Dr. Kvaal have helped me to succeed in so many ways, and I appreciate their guidance and support more than they know. Their ideas and suggestions helped to shift my project from a mere concept into a tangible task. This project would not have been possible without help from my wonderful husband, Ryan Mulloy, M.A. His support and assistance carried me though many challenging circumstances. I would like to thank him for collecting and entering data when I could not. I thank him for his support throughout graduate school and for always believing in me. To my dad, Stan Messner, M.D., thank you for fostering my stick-to-itiveness and for teaching me “when the going gets tough, the tough get going.” Thank you Dad, for supporting me and believing in me. I am aware of the sacrifices you made to provide me with a strong education, and words cannot express the appreciation I have for you. To my grandparents, Lorna and Jon Kardatzke, thank you for encouraging me and for helping me grow into the young professional I am today. Lorna and Jon have provided me with more love and support than one could hope for, and I appreciate them iii more than words can express. To my Aunt Kim Noller, your humor and support helped me through many difficult times; thank you for your laughter, sensibility, and loving heart. To Annie Mulloy, my friend and companion, thank you. Annie has been there for me throughout my entire graduate school experience, and I treasure her. Many, many thanks to all other family and friends; you are dear to my heart and appreciated. iv Abstract Somatization is common in primary care, problematic for patients and providers, and an enigma etiologically. Patients who persistently somatize are at high risk of iatrogenic harm and are primary contributors to escalating health care costs. In order for health professionals to intervene, the primary etiology of barriers to treatment as well as particular barriers to treatment must be identified. The present study explored connections between the etiology of somatization (immature defense mechanisms) and current behavioral descriptions of somatization. Barriers to treatment (negative attitudes towards professional psychological help) were also explored, with the prediction that immature defense mechanisms would mediate the relationship between somatization and negative attitudes. Participants included 302 patients of a family medicine clinic. Somatization was measured on a continuum using the Health Attitudes Survey. Negative attitudes were measured using the Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale—Short Form, and defense mechanisms were measured using the Defense Style Questionnaire-40. Results indicated that, the more severe the somatization, the more severe the use of immature defense mechanisms. Negative attitudes towards professional psychological help were not related to somatization. Immature defense mechanisms did not mediate between somatizing and attitudes towards professional psychological help. Implications of these findings and directions for future research are discussed. Clinical implications for primary care providers working with somatizing populations are also presented. v Table of Contents Title Page i Approval Page ii Acknowledgments iii Abstract v Table of Contents vi List of Tables ix List of Appendices x Chapter I: Introduction 11 Overview 11 Understanding Somatization 13 Outline 13 Chapter II: Literature Review 14 Epidemiology 16 Definition 16 History 17 Current Conceptualization of Somatization 20 Historical Conceptualization of Somatization 22 Defense Mechanisms and Somatization 24 Defense Mechanisms and Functional Somatic Symptoms Barriers to Treatment: Attitudes 25 29 Attitudes Towards Physicians 29 Stigma and Attitudes 30 vi Attitudes Towards Mental Health Professionals 31 Summary 32 Goals 32 Hypotheses 33 Chapter III: Methodology 33 Participants 33 Procedure 34 Measures 35 Demographics Questionnaire 35 Health Attitudes Survey 35 Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help 36 Defensive Style Questionnaire 38 Chapter IV: Results 40 Preliminary Analyses 40 Descriptive Data 40 Demographic Data and Group Comparisons 40 Main Hypotheses 43 Mediation 43 Sobel Test 44 Bootstrapping 45 Results of Bootstrapping Using Sobel Mediation Test 45 Supplementary Hypotheses 45 Chapter V: Discussion 49 vii Limitations 54 Future Directions 55 Clinical Implications 59 Concluding Comment 62 References 63 Appendices 79 viii List of Tables Table 1: Descriptive Statistics 41 Table 2: Correlations Between Demographic Variables and Total Scores on DSQ IDS, HAS Total, and ATS Total 42 Table 3: Between Subjects Effects of Univariate Regression and Bootstrapping and Sobel Tests for Mediation 47 Table 4: Correlations Between Subscales of Health Attitudes Survey and Defensive Style Questionnaire Immature Defense Subdomain 48 ix List of Appendices Appendix A: Implied Consent Form 79 Appendix B: Instructions for Participants 81 Appendix C: Personal Information Questionnaire 82 Appendix D: Defensive Style Questionnaire—40 84 Appendix E: Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help 88 Appendix F: Health Attitudes Survey 90 x 11 Chapter I: Introduction Overview Somatization, characterized by the “production of recurrent and numerous medical symptoms with no discernible organic cause,” (“Somatization,” 2013) is one of the most common and perplexing problems affecting primary care medicine today (Woolfolk & Allen, 2012; Woolfolk & Lesley, 2007). Current literature primarily focuses on the behaviors and attitudes associated with somatization, such as stated dissatisfaction with care, high utilization of care, and excessive health worry (Jyväsjärvi et al., 2001; Noyes, Langbehn, Happel, Sieren, & Muller, 1999). The etiology of somatization is poorly understood, and research on etiology has dwindled due to an increased focus on the behavioral manifestations of psychosomatic syndromes (Duddu, Isaac, & Chaturvedi, 2006). Therefore, this study examined the relationship between the current behavioral descriptions of somatization and one of the oldest and most widely known theories on causality: Somatization results from unconscious defensive strategies used by the ego to defend against intolerable anxiety (Freud, 1937; Holder-Perkins & Wise, 2001). By exploring connections between somatization and proposed causal factors of somatization (defense mechanisms), the current study added to limited literature exploring the etiology of somatization. There is a paucity of research on defense mechanisms of primary care patients in the United States who present with somatization. To address the gap in the literature, this study aimed to identify the relationship between psychological defense mechanisms and somatization in order to examine whether the relationship is worth further investigation. A significant 12 relationship between somatization and defense mechanisms may spark future interest and investigation into the etiology of somatization. In addition to a lack of understanding regarding the etiology of somatization, there is a gap in psychosomatic research regarding particular barriers to treatment in somatizing populations. One such barrier to treatment pertains to negative attitudes held by somatizing individuals. Current research suggests that when somatization is present, negative attitudes toward medical professionals are also present (Noyes et al., 1999). To date, research had yet to examine whether this view extends to attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help. To address this gap in the literature, this study included a second component of investigation: the relationship between somatization and attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help. The current study explored potential links between somatization, immature defense mechanisms, and attitudes towards professional psychological help, including the extent to which attitudinal barriers to treatment are caused by immature defensive processes. Bridging the gaps between somatization, defense mechanisms, and attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help, a third component was added to the study; the present study examined whether immature defense mechanisms explained (mediated) the relationship between attitudes and somatization. For mediation to occur, immature defense mechanisms must account for negative attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help (Baron & Kenny, 1986; Preacher and Hayes, 2004). In other words, if individuals engaging in somatization behavior were to interrupt their continual use of immature defense mechanisms, they may cease to hold negative attitudes 13 toward professional psychological help (total mediation) or may hold less negative attitudes towards professional psychological help (partial mediation). Understanding Somatization Somatization is often characterized as existing along a continuum, rather than as a discrete disorder. According to Kirmayer and Robbins (1991), “there is no unique class of psychosomatic disorders—only particular clinical instances in which psychosocial factors play an overriding role in causing or aggravating a patient’s condition” (p. 2). The mind-body connection is undeniable, and research indicates that, at one time or another, most individuals will experience an impact of psychological stress on physical health (Smith, Conway, & Cole, 2009). In the current study, the term somatization will be used as a generic concept and should not be regarded as part of a particular diagnostic category. The term “somatizer” will refer to individuals currently engaging in somatization. Henceforth, the terms somatization and somatizer will refer to the current behavioral descriptions of somatization. Outline Despite multiple efforts to conceptualize and treat somatization, researchers and health professionals remain baffled by the construct and struggle to find solutions to this ever-expanding psychiatric phenomenon. Leading researchers of psychosomatic medicine label somatization as “medicine’s unresolved problem” (Lipowski, 1987, p. 294) and note that there is a pronounced “lack of consensus” in regards to its definition and classification (Lamberty, 2008, p. 9). To introduce this unresolved problem, I first address current research on somatization, providing a review of problems associated with somatization, epidemiology, and definitions. Second, I address the complex history of 14 somatization research. I highlight why somatization remains an unsolved problem, discussing the shift of focus from etiological speculation to behavioral description. Finally, I discuss how researching primary defense mechanisms and attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help may lead to a greater understanding of somatization. Chapter II: Literature Review According to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, the United States of America spends more money on each individual’s healthcare than any other country in the world (2002, as cited in Crane & Christenson, 2008). Cucciare and O’Donohue (2003) argued that patients with high medical utilization are large contributors to the ever-growing health care costs. Research has indicated a strong link between somatization and high utilization (Hiller & Fichter, 2004). The multiple tests conducted to find organic pathology in somatizers has an enormous impact on the escalating cost of health care in the United States (Fink, Rosendal, & Olesen, 2005). In fact, according to Cummings and VandenBos (1981), somatization in particular is causing the health care system to go bankrupt. Individuals who persistently engage in somatization often request specialty care; tend to be treatment-resistant; and often request costly scans, surgeries, and hospitalizations (Peters, Stanley, Rose, & Salmon, 1998). According to Fink (1992), these procedures place somatizing individuals in the high-risk grouping for iatrogenic harm. Patients with a long-term history of somatization are frequently grouped in “serious risk” categories as the likelihood that they will develop illness, drug dependence, 15 or injury, from medical examinations and unnecessary treatment is substantial (Kirmayer & Robbins, 1991; van der Feltz-Cornelis, Swinkels, Blankenstein, Hoedeman, & Keuter, 2011). Somatization is problematic for all individuals involved in the provision of health care services. Somatization is associated with a more negative relationship between primary care physician (PCP) and patient (Woolfolk & Allen, 2012). The process of determining the etiology of symptoms is made difficult by communication problems between somatizing individuals and health care professionals. Though the inability to precisely articulate the contribution of psychosocial factors to somatic symptoms (a sophisticated task) is common to most, somatizing individuals may have an unwillingness to explore any contribution of psychosocial factors with their PCPs. This further blocks PCPs from recognizing psychopathological etiologies. The doctor-patient relationship is often harmed by negative communications which give rise to mutual frustration and negative labeling. For example, physicians have labeled somatizers as “hateful” and “crocks” (Groves, 1978; Lipsitt, 1970). Research has indicated that PCPs frequently refer to somatizing individuals as problematic, while somatizing individuals label PCPs as uncaring and unsatisfactory in their handling medical concerns (Blackwell & De Morgan, 1996; Noyes et al., 1999). PCPs often view somatizing individuals as difficult to manage and have had such pronounced problems treating such patients that specific models have been created to aid PCPs in the treatment of somatizing individuals (Bass & Benjamin, 1993). 16 Epidemiology The epidemiology of somatization varies greatly, depending upon which definition of somatization is used. When the restrictive criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (4th ed., text rev.; DSM-IV-TR; American Psychiatric Association, 2000) is applied, rates of somatization tend to be quite low, ranging from 0.2 to 2% for somatization disorder to 0.1 to 3% for conversion disorder. However, the majority of clinicians do not utilize such circumscribed criteria when researching and treating somatization (Lamberty, 2008). When somatization is more broadly defined, prevalence rates increase, and the consistency of rates decreases. For example, when characterized as the presentation of medically unexplained symptoms, rates have been found to range from 20% to upwards of 60% (Elderkin-Thompson, Silver, & Waitzkin, 1998; Steinbrecher, Koerber, Frieser, & Hiller, 2011). Definition Although researchers and health professionals have defined somatization differently, many are in agreement that there are two features of somatization: First, somatizing individuals present with recurrent and numerous medically unexplained symptoms. Second, psychosocial stressors are antecedents of somatic presentation. Lipowski’s (1988) landmark definition includes both chief factors and is used in the present study. Lipowski defines somatization as “a tendency to experience and communicate somatic distress and symptoms unaccounted for by pathological findings in response to psychosocial stress and to seek medical help for them” (p. 1359). One of the problems with this definition is that, without knowing Lipowski’s (1988) intentions, one may assume that this definition connotes an unconscious defense 17 mechanism. However, Lipowski specifically noted that this definition “is descriptive, does not imply a putative defense mechanism, and should not be confused with the theoretical one” (p. 1359). In response to the plethora of popular and largely psychoanalytic definitions of somatization, Lipowski aimed to change the connotation of the term from one implying a hypothesized theoretical psychogenesis to one largely descriptive and behavioral in nature. According to Lipowski (1988), somatization is not to be considered a disorder nor diagnostic category, and researchers have commented that Lipowski’s definition is “in line with the current concept of medically unexplained symptoms” (Rosendal, Fink, Bro, & Olesen, 2005, p. 2). Much of the difficulty in understanding somatization in research and practice is because the definition and conceptualization of the construct has changed numerous times. Confusion regarding the definition of somatization has resulted from its complex history. History There is debate over the genesis of psychosomatic syndromes (Lamberty, 2008). However, historians suggest that the concept of somatization came into existence over four thousand years ago in ancient Egypt (Smith, 1990; Woolfolk & Allen, 2007). Egyptians theorized that, in women, the uterus would occasionally become displaced, causing a “wandering womb,” resulting in a large number of pathologies (Fink, 1996). This concept later appeared in a number of Grecian medical texts, one of which was written by the Greek physician and forefather of modern medicine, Hippocrates. Hippocrates did not revise the concept behind the wandering womb phenomenon but relabeled the condition “hysteria.” The syndrome hysteria was acknowledged in many 18 European medical communities and evolved over time to become “more neurologically oriented and less frankly misogynistic” (Lamberty, 2008, p. 4). In the middle of the 19th century, the French psychiatrist Paul Briquet (1859) authored a pilot thesis on hysteria, Traité Clinique et Thérapeutique de L’hystérie, proposing that the syndrome occurred in both men and women and was a type of nervous condition (Mai & Merskey, 1980; Woolfolk & Allen, 2007). Around the same time period, Jean-Martin Charcot (regarded as the founder of modern neurology) concurred with the neurological conceptualization of hysteria and began to converse with other influential physicians regarding the syndrome. Two of these people, Pierre Janet and Sigmund Freud, were influential in shifting the conceptualization of hysteria from neurological in nature to psychological (Lamberty, 2008). Janet produced works on the relationship between hysteria, suggestibility, and the subconscious, which became later popularized by Freud (Lamberty, 2008). At the end of the 19th century, Freud (1937) introduced the concept of “conversion hysteria.” Freud stated, “in hysteria, the incompatible idea is rendered innocuous by its sum of excitation being transferred into something somatic, for this I should like to propose the name conversion” (p. 49). In other words, he believed that anxiety associated with unconscious conflict was unacceptable to the individual and was therefore concealed from conscious recognition. The somatic symptom was a mechanism by which the unconscious could communicate psychological distress (Woolfolk & Allen, 2007). Uncomfortable sensations such as anxiety were converted into a more acceptable form of suffering, somatic expression. 19 Though concepts underlying somatization had been present for centuries, the official label of somatization came about in the early 1900s (Stekel, 1924). Soon after conversion hysteria was popularized, the physician William Stekel coined the term “somatization” and defined it as “a bodily disorder that arises as an expression of deepseated neurosis” (Smith et al., 2009). Sill adhering to a psychoanalytic framework for explaining somatic symptoms, Stekel advocated the idea that, in somatization, psychological problems are not consciously acknowledged and are instead converted into somatic complaints. Stekel’s conceptualization of somatization (comparable to the mechanism of conversion or a psychiatric defense mechanism) generated the recognition of various psychosomatic disorders, which were then predominately treated with psychoanalytic methods (Smith et al., 2009). The zeal for psychoanalytic conceptualization and treatment dwindled due to developments in the history of psychiatry. In the later 1900s, Emil Kraepelin (regarded as the father of modern psychiatric diagnosis) attempted to dissuade health professionals from adhering to a theoretical (i.e., psychoanalytic) understanding of psychosomatic syndromes in favor of classifying diseases according to observable symptoms (Trede, 2007). It was Kraepelin who popularized the idea of abandoning the postulation of etiologies to focus on the forecasting of outcomes (Decker, 2007). He viewed his way of conceptualizing syndromes to be “clinical” in nature and the traditional way to be “symptomatic” in nature and suggested that his students focus on hard evidence rather than theoretical assumptions (Géraud, 2007; Trede, 2007). Kraepelin’s research and classification of disease entities eventually led to a systematic nosography and away from theoretical speculation (Palm & Möller, 2011). 20 Though Freud’s views remained popular in 20th century, Kraepelin’s synthesis of mental disorders into a workable model, outlined in his pedagogical device, Compendium der Psychiatrie (Kraepelin, 1883), greatly influenced the way psychiatric illness is conceptualized and classified today. As Freud’s theories began to be largely questioned, Kraepelin’s ideas gained in popularity (Trede, 2007). The effects in this shift can be seen in the current classification, diagnosis, and treatment of psychosomatic syndromes (Palm & Möller, 2011) where the behaviorally descriptive approach remains prominent. Current Conceptualization of Somatization In modern times, somatization is not typically conceptualized and defined as a type of Freudian defense mechanism (Smith et al., 2009). Researchers and health professionals take a behavioral and purely descriptive (somewhat Kraepelinian) approach to the diagnosis, classification, and treatment of psychosomatic syndromes, largely free from etiological speculation. Currently, somatization is most often explained and observed as abnormal illness behavior (Chaturvedi, Desai, & Shaligram, 2006; Hiller & Fichter, 2004; Kihlstrom & Kihlstrom, 1999). Pilowsky (1997) defined abnormal illness behavior as the following: An inappropriate or maladaptive mode of experiencing, evaluating or acting in relation to one’s own state of health, which persists, despite the fact that a doctor (or otherwise recognized social agent) has offered accurate and reasonably lucid information concerning the person’s health status and the appropriate course of management (if any), with provision of adequate opportunity for discussion, clarification and negotiation, based on a thorough examination of all parameters 21 of functioning (physical, psychological, and social), taking into account the individual’s age educational and sociocultural background. (p. 25) Researchers and health professionals suggest that psychosomatic syndromes are not best understood according to current somatoform nosology, but as degrees of severity or frequency of this abnormal illness behavior (Kirmayer & Looper, 2006). These behaviors would include excessive or inadequate responses to symptoms including, but not limited to, hypochondriasis and somatization (Kirmayer & Looper, 2006). In this way, somatization is currently understood in terms of the behaviors and number of symptoms associated with the syndrome (i.e., recurrent medical visits, unnecessary hospitalizations, chronic complaints about medical professionals, stated dissatisfaction with state of health; Duddu et al., 2006; Kirmayer & Looper, 2006). Conceptualizing somatization in this manner has allowed for identification of individuals engaging in somatization. Recognition of such individuals can lead to avoidance of unnecessary tests and procedures and might prevent continued abnormal illness behaviors (Chaturvedi et al., 2006). However, the etiology and underlying factors that contribute to the development and sustainment of somatization remain amorphous (Smith et al., 2009). Additionally, the costs that somatization incurs for federally and state-funded programs, medical professionals, society, and patients implies that a serious problem remains. Individuals engaging in somatization continually return to health clinics (Hiller & Fichter, 2002; Lipowski, 1988), which indicates that health care professionals are not understanding and treating these patients in the most effective manner. Therefore, a reinvestigation of the historical conceptualization of somatization is warranted and may highlight a more effective way of conceptualizing and treating these patients. 22 Historical Conceptualization of Somatization Previous to the introduction of the illness behavior definition, somatization was largely considered a defense mechanism. When construed in this way, somatization is defined as “the unconscious rechanneling of repressed emotions into somatic symptoms as a form of symbolic communication” (Sutker & Adams, 2001, p. 216). Psychoanalytic theory suggests that the physiological symptoms that occur in somatization function as defenses against intolerable anxiety related to having a psychological problem (Kirmayer & Robbins, 1996). Though defense mechanisms are a part of normal everyday life, they become pathological when their continued use leads to maladaptive behavior and consequences. The repeated use of the defense mechanism of somatization is thought to lead to the maladaptive behavior of relentlessly seeking medical attention for a psychological problem. Freud (1894) provided the original definition of a defense mechanism. He considered a defense mechanism a counterforce which serves to protect the individual from overwhelming anxiety and unacceptable impulses (Cramer, 2006). Kohut (1977) stated that the function of a defense mechanism is to protect the self (e.g., one’s selfesteem). In other words, defenses help individuals to cope with the realities of daily life. In this way, they are adaptive. However, defense mechanisms can be used in maladaptive ways which can lead to problems in daily functioning. To date, there is not a consensus on the number and type of defense mechanisms. Some theorists have attempted to classify defenses. Vaillant (1992) categorized defense mechanisms according to developmental level: pathological, immature, neurotic, and mature. Defenses at the pathological level include delusional projection, denial, 23 distortion, and splitting. These defenses are considered pathological because they often kindle severe reality distortion, lead to social rejection, and are common in individuals with severe and chronic mental health conditions (Valliant, 1992, 1994). Defenses at the immature level include acting out, fantasy, idealization, passive aggression, projection, projective identification, and somatization. Individuals who frequently utilize immature defense mechanisms are often viewed as socially objectionable, difficult to handle, and unrealistic. Persistent use of immature defense mechanisms leads to maladaptive coping with daily life and is often associated with mental illness (Valliant, 1992, 1994). Defenses at the neurotic level include displacement, dissociation, hypochondriasis, intellectualization, isolation, rationalization, reaction formation, regression, repression, and undoing. Neurotic defenses can be used in adaptive or maladaptive ways and can either promote or hinder adaptive coping. Finally, defenses at the mature level include altruism, anticipation, humor, identification, introjection, sublimation, and thought suppression. These defenses are considered mature because they promote successful coping and interpersonal effectiveness, support self-control, and are often utilized by emotionally healthy individuals (Valliant, 1992). Largely based on Vailliant’s system, the DSM-IV-TR (2000) recognized a provisional diagnostic axis for ego mechanisms of defense. Additionally, McWilliams (1994) provided a simplified classification system of ego mechanisms of defense, which labels defenses as either primitive or higher-order. If unconscious defenses against anxiety provoking drives, wishes, or fears are indeed involved in somatization, then the treatment of anxiety associated with these unacceptable drives, wishes, or fears may provide a solution to the problem of somatizing individuals taking up so much time and resources in the medical field. As noted above, 24 there is a scarcity of research on the relationship between the contemporary definition and classification of somatization (behaviors and attitudes) and defense mechanisms. It remains to be seen whether the use of defense mechanisms will predict somatization as defined by the behavioral definition. However, a small number of studies have indicated that the psychodynamic conceptualization of somatization may be worth a second look. Defense Mechanisms and Somatization Many definitions and discussions of somatization imply that defensive processes are taking place, but there is little research on the connection. In fact, to this researcher’s knowledge, there has been limited published articles investigating the role of defense mechanisms in psychosomatic syndromes that indicate that there may be a relationship between immature defense mechanisms and behaviorally defined somatization (Deshpande, Vidya, Bendre, and Ghate, 2011; Xiao & Fu, 2006). Deshpande and colleagues (2011) examined the defense mechanisms and intellectual capacity of pediatric patients with medically unexplained symptoms in order to understand how to categorize their pathophysiology and increase treatment effectiveness. Participants included 17 children who met criteria for persistent somatoform pain disorder according to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems (ICD-10). Children who had a speculated organic cause for their pain were excluded from the study. Each participant was given a semistructured interview that assessed demographic information, details about pain, precipitating stressors, and individual and family history. One parent was present and participated in each child’s interview. In addition to the interview, participants were administered the Colored Progressive Matrices and the Children's Apperception Test. 25 Results from the Children’s Apperception Test indicated that pediatric patients with somatoform pain disorder engaged in immature defense mechanisms. The most commonly utilized defenses were denial, reaction formation, repression, and rationalization. Although this study highlighted a possible connection between immature defense mechanisms and psychosomatic presentation, it was limited by its small sample size, exclusively pediatric population, and lack of a control group. The authors suggested that future studies should include larger and more diverse samples. Xiao and Fu (2006) also examined the defense mechanisms of individuals diagnosed with persistent somatoform pain disorder as defined by the ICD-10. Participants included 70 somatoform pain disorder patients and 60 healthy controls. Defense mechanisms were measured via the Defensive Style Questionnaire. Results indicated that individuals with persistent somatoform pain disorder used more immature defense mechanisms and fewer mature defense mechanisms than healthy controls. Somatization was a frequently utilized defense mechanism by the pain disorder group. The research of Xiao and Fu indicated that immature defense mechanisms may play an important role in the maintenance of somatoform disorders. Results indicated that the relationship between somatization and immature defense mechanisms is worth further investigation. Defense Mechanisms and Functional Somatic Syndromes. Often, somatoform disorders are used as alternative descriptors for functional syndromes (Manu, 1998). Similar to psychosomatic syndromes, functional somatic syndromes are characterized by various combinations of medically unexplained symptoms. Though there is the presence of physiologic abnormality in many individuals with these syndromes, the number of 26 symptoms and intensity of suffering is often in excess of demonstrable biologic abnormality (Barsky & Borus, 1999). The link between somatization and functional somatic syndromes appears to be strong (Tsukui & Ebana, 2009). Though the assertion is controversial, many researchers and health professionals believe that functional somatic syndromes such as fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue syndrome, and inflammatory bowel disease are characteristic expressions of somatization (Smith et al., 2009). Connections have been made between psychical pain with no discernible organic cause and psychiatric illness, and the same treatment has been suggested for both somatization and functional somatic syndromes (Fjorback et al., 2012; Magni, 1987). Due to the overlap in these syndromes, a review of the link between immature defense mechanisms and functional somatic syndromes (an example of a categorical model imposed on a continuum) is warranted. The presence of somatization is common among chronic pain patients (BirketSmith, 2001). According to Tauschke, Merskey, and Helmes (1990), chronic pain may arise from defense mechanisms. Sundbom, Henningsson, Holm, Söderbergh, and Evengård, (2002) assessed the influence of defense mechanisms on patients diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome. Participants included 13 individuals diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome, two contrast groups of 19 individuals diagnosed with conversion disorder, and 13 healthy controls. Results indicated that the chronic fatigue group showed a defensive pattern characterized by denial, an immature defense mechanism. Similar to Sundbom and colleagues, Egle and Porsch (1992) examined the defense mechanisms of individuals with psychogenic pain who engage in abnormal illness behavior. Results indicated that psychogenic pain patients who engage in 27 abnormal illness behavior such as “doctor shopping” were characterized by the use of immature defense mechanisms. The term doctor shopping is used to describe the behavior of consulting multiple medical professionals in a short amount of time in order to attain prescription medications and other forms of medical treatment (Sansone & Sansone, 2012). These patients were likely, in particular, to use the immature defense mechanism “turning against the self.” When individuals engage in this immature defense mechanism, they self-punish by directing adverse behavior towards themselves (“Turning Against the Self,” 2013). Fibromyalgia is a controversial diagnosis that manifests as a constellation of symptoms such as fatigue, widespread pain, and atypical sensation sensitivity (Van Houdenhove & Egle, 2004). This syndrome is believed by some to be a form of somatization, as research has shown that individuals with fibromyalgia tend to somatize psychological pain (Trygg, Lundberg, Rosenlund, Timpka, & Gerdle, 2002; Winfield, 2001). Landmark, Stiles, Fors, Holen, and Borchgrevink (2008) assessed whether individuals with fibromyalgia relied more heavily on defense mechanisms compared to controls. A secondary goal of the study was to examine the defense mechanisms of fibromyalgia patients compared to those of individuals with major depressive disorder. Participants included 25 fibromyalgia patients without a diagnosis of lifetime major depressive disorder, 17 fibromyalgia patients with comorbid major depressive disorder, 24 individuals with a diagnosis of non-psychotic major depressive disorder, and 25 controls. The Life Style Index was used to measure defense mechanisms. Defense mechanisms measured by the Life Style Index include compensation, denial, displacement, intellectualization (including undoing, sublimation and rationalization), 28 projection, reaction formation, regression (including acting out and fantasy) and repression (including introjections and isolation). The Life Style Index also includes a total score which represents overall level of defensive functioning. Results indicated large differences between the four groups in total number of defense mechanisms used. Specifically, major depressive disorder patients and fibromyalgia patients with major depressive disorder used more defenses than healthy controls. Fibromyalgia patients with comorbid depression endorsed more items pertaining to the use of regression, displacement, and compensation compared to healthy controls. Research has indicated that psychogenic gastrointestinal symptoms often coexist with inflammatory bowel disease (Simren et al., 2002). In fact, some researchers who specialize in the study of psychosomatic syndromes believe that, in the field of gastroenterology, irritable bowel syndrome is a form of somatic displacement (Smith et al., 2009). Hyphantis and colleagues (2005) examined the association between inflammatory bowel disease (including ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease) and defense style. Utilizing the Defensive Style Questionnaire, a self-report measure which groups defense mechanisms into immature, neurotic, and mature subdomains, Hyphantis and colleagues found that Crohn’s disease patients were characterized by an immature defensive profile. In a later study, Hyphantis and colleagues (2010) explored the relationship between psychological distress, somatization, defense mechanisms, and inflammatory bowel disease to determine how these factors influence quality of life. The Defense Style Questionnaire and Life Style Index were used to assess defense mechanisms. Hyphantis and colleagues suggested that, when faced with conditions that 29 involve chronic pain, individuals engage in the defense mechanism reaction formation, which complicates their medical treatment. In summary, research indicates that patients with medically unexplained symptoms and symptoms in excess of what is expected given organic causes may use more defense mechanisms than healthy controls (Landmark et al., 2008). More specifically, individuals with functional somatic symptoms and with somatoform disorders have been shown to use more immature defense mechanisms than those not currently presenting with psychogenic pain (Xiao & Fu, 2006). This overuse of immature defense mechanisms may lead to the over-utilization medical services to attain relief from the unconscious anxiety. This over-utilization is problematic for health care professionals and patients, as research has indicated a link between high utilization, somatization, and negative doctor-patient relationships (Hahn, Thompson, Wills, Stern, & Budner, 1994; Woolfolk & Allen, 2012). Barriers to Treatment: Attitudes Attitudes Towards Physicians. Individuals engaging in somatization are often identified by their negative health attitudes (Noyes et al., 1999). Noyes et al. developed a self-report scale, the Health Attitudes Survey, which identifies the presence of somatization by the health behaviors and health attitudes patients endorse. Individuals who engage in chronic somatization tend to have negative attitudes towards their physicians, which serve as barriers to effective treatment. Noyes et al. found that, compared to control subjects, somatizing individuals endorse more dissatisfaction with medical care, agreeing that physicians do not seem to understand their health problems, are unequipped to handle their health concerns, and provide less than satisfactory medical 30 treatment. Research findings such as these are common, indicating a strong link between difficult physician-patient encounters and attitudes of somatizing individuals (Nagel, McGrady, Lynch, & Wahl, 2003; Smith, 1985). In fact, because the presence of mutual negative attitudes in the doctor-patient relationship is so evident, questionnaires such as the Difficult Doctor-Patient Relationship Questionnaire (Hahn et al., 1994) have been developed and used to identify problem patients such as those presenting with psychosomatic issues. What remains somewhat of a mystery, is why somatizing individuals have such negative attitudes towards their health care professionals. Stigma and Attitudes. Somatization is a defense mechanism that may be used to protect the individual from stigma associated with psychiatric problems. Supporting this notion, research has indicated that fear of being stigmatized is one of the attitudes common in individuals with psychogenic medical presentations (Freidl et al., 2007). Patients with medically unexplained symptoms often endorse feeling stigmatized when a mental health professional is involved in their treatment (Deshpande et al., 2011). The feeling of being stigmatized may explain why somatizing individuals avoid contact with mental health care professionals, though these professionals are likely more equipped to deal with the underlying anxiety at the root of their immature defense mechanisms. Freidl, Piralic-Spitzl, and Aigner (2009) examined the attitudes of patients diagnosed with epileptic, dissociative, or somatoform pain disorders to better understand the role of mental illness stigma in these populations. Participants included 45 patients diagnosed with epileptic disorder, 14 patients with dissociative disorder, and 42 diagnosed with somatoform pain disorder according to criteria specified by the DSM-IV-TR (American Psychiatric Association, 2000). Participants were given Link’s Perceived Stigma 31 Questionnaire, an instrument used to detect attitudes towards psychiatric illnesses and treatment. Results from Freidl et al.’s study indicated that individuals with epileptic, dissociative, and somatoform pain disorders have a fear of stigma which can lead to delayed psychiatric treatment seeking. The fear of being stigmatized occurred more frequently among somatoform pain patients compared to individuals with dissociate or epileptic conditions. Specifically, patients with somatoform conditions endorsed concern regarding the social impact of having a mental illness. Results indicated that these patients are preoccupied with a fear of rejection, which may lead them to ignore psychiatric contributions to somatic symptoms. Attitudes Towards Mental Health Professionals. Though research has indicated a link between somatization, mental illness, and stigma (Friedl et al., 2007), there is a paucity of research exploring somatizing individuals’ specific attitudes towards mental health professionals. In other words, it remains largely unknown whether or not somatizing individuals have specific negative perceptions of psychological service providers. Some research has indicated that there is a relationship between somatization and denial of need for mental health care (Kirmayer & Robbins, 1996); however, research in this area is limited. Kirmayer and Robbins examined the attitudes of individuals identified as somatizers and found that these individuals were significantly less willing to accept that there were psychological aspects to their distress and were less concerned with having an emotional problem compared to individuals identified as nonsomatizers. In summary, individuals who somatize frequently endorse negative attitudes towards their physicians, less psychological distress, a high fear of stigma, and more 32 negative attitudes towards individuals with mental illness. Research has yet to examine whether these views extend to mental health professionals. Summary Most of the literature on somatization has been devoted to the “what” of psychosomatic behavior, exploring what types of behavior somatizing individuals present with. To date, little research has explored the “why” of psychosomatic behavior, exploring why treatment barriers exist. Researching potential connections between immature defense mechanisms, current behavioral descriptions of somatization, and negative attitudes mays help researchers and professionals understand what is driving and maintaining the psychosomatic behavior. Once causal factors are identified, ways for health professionals to intervene may become elucidated. In other words, if health professionals are aware that immature defense mechanisms and negative attitudes towards professional psychological help are barriers to treatment, interventions can be aimed at countering these blockades. Improving treatment for somatizing individuals may lead to improvement in functioning, less exposure to harm, more positive relations between medical provider and patient and lower health care expenditures. Goals The present study had three main objectives: (a) to identify whether there is a relationship between the modern conceptualization and definition of somatization (abnormal illness behavior) and the historical definition (defense mechanisms), (b) to examine whether the developmental level of psychological defense mechanisms predicts somatization and attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help, and (c) to determine if immature defense mechanisms explain the relationship between 33 somatization and attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help (meditational hypothesis). Hypotheses Based on existing literature, I predicted that (a) higher scores of somatization (as measured by total score on the Health Attitudes Survey) were associated with higher scores of immature defense mechanisms (i.e., rationalization, autistic fantasy, displacement, isolation, dissociation, devaluation, splitting, denial, passive aggression, somatization, acting out, and projection) as measured by the Defensive Style Questionnaire-40 immature defense subdomain score. I also predicted that (b) higher scores of somatization were associated with more negative mental health treatment attitudes (as measured by low scores on the Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale-Short Form). Because immature defense mechanisms may be the primary etiology for barriers to treatment (including negative attitudes), regarding mediation, I predicted that (c) immature defense mechanisms would partially account for the relationship between somatizing and negative treatment attitudes (partial mediation). Chapter III: Methodology Participants Participants were 302 patients at a large, private family medicine practice in the Midwest. In order to participate in the investigation, participants had to be at least 18 years of age and able to speak and read English. Due to missing data on some variables, not all of the comparisons below included all participants. Thirty-seven percent of participants (n = 110) were men and sixty-three percent were women (n = 189). 34 Participants ranged in age from 18 years to 85 years (M = 43.86, SD = 15.8). Patient’s reported racial background was 91.1% White, 2.6% Latino, 1.7% African American, 1.3% American Indian, 1.0% Asian American, 1.3% Other. In terms of relationship status, 70.9% were married or partnered, 18.2% single, 6% divorced, 3.3% other, 1.5% separated. In terms of highest level of education, 41% had a college degree, 37.4% completed high school, 12.9% had a graduate degree, 2.3% a professional degree, 1.7% other, and 1.3% a doctoral degree. Mean annual family income approximated $67,000 (SD = 9,000). Procedure Over the course of 2 weeks, participants who were general admissions patients in a family practice were approached and asked to participate by the primary investigator or a research assistant. Participating patients were given a numbered packet that included a consent form, an explanation of the study, and the questionnaires. Packets were not linked in any way to identifiable information. The investigators were the only individuals who had access to the completed forms and did not have information regarding the names of those who accepted or declined. Interested patients were presented with a written description of the study that did not explicitly mention that the study examined somatization, defense mechanisms, and attitudes (see Appendix A). Patients completed the questionnaires before the medical visit. After completion, the participants dropped the survey into a large covered bin, which was removed and emptied daily. 35 Measures Demographics questionnaire. Patients answered several demographic questions including gender, age, ethnicity, total family income, relationship status, and highest level of education (see Appendix C). Health Attitude Survey. The Health Attitude Survey (HAS; Noyes et al., 1999) is a 27-item self-report questionnaire designed to assess somatization (see Appendix F). Although it has been used to distinguish somatizing patients from controls, it can be used as a continuous measure, with higher scores representing a stronger presence of somatization. The HAS is intended for use as a rapid screening device in clinical settings. Each of the 27-items is scored on a Likert-type scale from 0 (strongly disagree) to 4 (strongly agree). It was developed and tested in a primary care population by Noyes and colleagues (1999). Items include questions related to psychological distress, somatic symptom presentation, and health care utilization. Specifically, there are six dimensions of somatization in the scale: dissatisfaction with care, frustration with ill health, high utilization of medical care, excessive health worry, psychological distress, and discordant communication of distress. Items on the psychological distress dimension include statements such as “It is easy to relax and stay calm.” Items on the somatic symptom presentation dimension include statements such as “I have trouble getting my mind off of my health.” Items on the health care utilization dimension include statements such as “I have seen many different doctors over the years” and “I do not go to the doctor often.” Additional items on the scale focus on both interactions with PCPs and patient satisfaction. Items on the dissatisfaction of care dimension include statements such as “I have been satisfied with the medical care I have received” and “Doctors have taken my 36 health problems seriously.” These items were developed based on the literature on somatization (Lipowski, 1986, 1987, 1988). The HAS correlates at a moderate level with other measures of somatic symptoms such as the Patient Questionnaire of the Primary Care Evaluation of Mental Disorders (PRIME-MD), which is another measure of somatization (Kroenke, Spitzer, & deGruy, 1998; Noyes et al., 1999). Self-rated scores on the HAS were moderately correlated with PCP ratings of somatization. In addition, Noyes and colleagues found the HAS to have high predictive value as somatizing individuals scored higher on the HAS than healthy controls. Results of Noyes and colleagues indicated that the HAS has adequate external validity as demographic and illness variables influenced scores on subscales in forecasted directions. Questions were worded both positively and negatively to reduce potential for response bias. Results of Noyes and colleagues indicated that the HAS was acceptable by patients, as fewer than 5% found the instrument to be unimportant, difficult, or upsetting. Noyes and colleagues (1999) also explored the utility of a brief version of the HAS for distinguishing somatizing and nonsomatizing patients. After examining the psychometric properties of the original 27-item version, in-depth analyses indicated that eight items effectively discriminated between somatizing and nonsomatizing patients. This brief version may be a more efficient screening tool for assessing for the presence of somatization. Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale. The Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale (ATSPPH; Fischer & Turner, 1970) is a 29-item self-report questionnaire that was designed to assess mental 37 health treatment attitudes. The ATSPPH assesses an individual’s acknowledgment of the need for psychological help (8 items), stigma tolerance (5 items), interpersonal openness (7 items), and confidence in mental health professionals (9 items). The scale measures the respondent’s tendency to accept or reject psychological help during a crisis or during prolonged psychological distress. Fisher and Turner standardized this scale on a sample consisting of college students and subsequent studies have indicated evidence for the scale’s validity in more diverse populations (reviewed in Fisher and Farina, 1995). According to Fisher and Farina (1995) the ATSPPH has good psychometric properties and has demonstrated a high internal reliability (α = .86). To date, it is the only measure for detecting mental health treatment attitudes that has been used and psychometrically studied in numerous studies (Elhai, Schweinle, & Anderson, 2008). For the ease of administration, the Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help Scale-Short Form (ATSPPH-SF; Fischer & Farina, 1995) was used in the current study (see Appendix E). The ATSPPH-SF is a 10-item measure that is frequently used to measure mental health treatment attitudes. These 10 items constitute two of the original scales factors: a) recognition of need for psychological help, and b) confidence in mental health professionals. Items on the “recognition of need for psychological help” dimension include statements such as “emotional problems resolve by themselves.” Items on the “confidence in mental health professionals” include statements such as “would find relief in psychotherapy if in emotional crisis.” The authors modified the original scale for the purpose of developing a scale which would yield one score that would represent the participant’s core attitude. Items are presented in a 4-point Likert-type format. Participants’ responses range from 0 (disagree) to 3 38 (agree). Scores can range from 0 to 30, with higher scores indicating more positive treatment attitudes. Fischer and Farina (1995) standardized the ATSPPH-SF on a sample of medical patients in a primary care clinic aged from 18 to 90 years. Fischer and Farina found that the ATSPPH-SF had a 1-month test-retest reliability of 0.80, a correlation of .87 with the original scale, and an internal consistency coefficient of .84. Elhai and colleagues (2008) analyzed data from 389 primary care patients and found that the ATSPPH-SF demonstrated a reliability coefficient alpha of 0.78. Constantine (2002) found that the ATSPPH-SF demonstrated a Cronbach’s alpha of .83. Defensive Style Questionnaire. The Defensive Style Questionnaire (DSQ-81; Bond, Gardner, Christian, & Sigal, 1983) is a widely utilized self-report questionnaire used to measure defense mechanisms. The DSQ has been found to have adequate reliability and validity in both cross-sectional and longitudinal studies (Steiner, Araujo, & Koopman, 2001). Since its creation, the DSQ has been through multiple revisions (Cramer, 2006). The original DSQ (DSQ-81) consists of 81 items representing 14 defenses and 4 defensive styles. This version was modified into the DSQ-88 by Bond et al. (1989). In this version of the DSQ, 14 of the original statements were dropped and 21 added, resulting in an 81-item questionnaire representing 20 defenses and 4 defensive styles. The DSQ was further modified by Andrews, Pollock, and Stewart (1989) to both establish correspondence with the original scale and create a shorter form. This modification resulted in the DSQ-72, a 72-item measure, which was then reduced to a 36item measure, the DSQ-36. In 1993, Andrews et al. noted a problem with the DSQ-36; the representation of the defenses was inconsistent. For example, one defense was 39 represented by 1 item while another represented by 10 items. This resulted in the creation of the DSQ-40, which was used in the present study (see Appendix D). In the DSQ-40, two items represent each of the defense mechanisms. The DSQ40 is composed of 40 items, which are rated on a Likert-type scale from 1 (strongly disagree) to 9 (strongly agree), with higher scores indicating more frequent usage of that defense. Defense mechanisms are group into three factors (immature, mature, and neurotic). Mature defense styles include humor (items 4, 26), suppression (items 2, 25), sublimation (items 3, 38), and anticipation (items 30, 35). Neurotic defense styles include reaction formation (items7, 28), idealization (items 21, 24), pseudo-altruism (items 1, 39), and undoing (items 32, 40). Immature defense styles include rationalization (items 5, 16), autistic fantasy (items 14, 17), displacement (items 31, 33), isolation (items 34, 37), dissociation (items 9, 15), devaluation (items 10, 13), splitting (items 19, 22), denial (items 8, 18), passive aggression (items 23, 36), somatization (items 12, 27), acting out (items 11, 20), and projection (items 6, 29). These factors have been found to correlate at a high rate (.93 to .97) with the factor scores from the DSQ-72 (Cramer, 2006). The DSQ-40 has been found to have an average 1-month test-retest reliability of .66 (Andrews, Singh, & Bond, 1993). The test-retest reliability of the individual defenses has varied from .38 to .80. Although this is low, the retest reliability for the individual defenses on other measures of psychological defense mechanisms are lower (Cramer, 2006). Vulić-Prtorić (2008) found the immature defense mechanism subdomain to have the highest reliability coefficient (.71) out of the three subdomains (immature, neurotic, and mature). Ruuttu and colleagues (2006) found the DSQ-40 to have adequate discriminate validity as outpatients reported more immature defensive 40 behavior than healthy controls. According to Andrews, Singh, and Bond (1993), the DSQ-40 has adequate construct validity as evidenced by the scale’s usefulness in discriminating between different clinical groups. To demonstrate that the behavioral definition of somatization and the defense mechanism somatization are theoretically different concepts, it was important to show that the behavioral definition was measured, not the defense mechanism. In order to improve discriminant validity, items assessing for the defense mechanism somatization were removed from the DSQ-40. Specifically, item number 12 “I get physically ill when things aren’t going well for me” and item number 27 “I get a headache hen I have to do something I don’t like” were removed from analyses conducted. Chapter IV: Results Preliminary Analyses Preliminary analyses using PASW Version 18.0.3 were conducted in order to test for normality of distributions and potential outliers. No corrections or transformations were necessary. Descriptive Data Descriptive statistics were calculated for all predictor, outcome, and mediator variables (see Table 1). Demographic Data and Group Comparisons Pearson product-moment correlational analyses were conducted to assess the relationship between education, age, office visits, annual income, and immature defense mechanisms, somatization, and attitudes towards seeking professional psychological help. Results of the correlational analyses indicated significant negative correlations 41 between several demographic variables and the Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help total score, the Health Attitudes Survey total score, and the Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain (see Table 2). Independent samples t tests were used to determine whether gender differences existed in somatization. The mean score for women on the Health Attitudes Survey was 40.69 (SD = 13.92), and the mean score for men was 40.02 (SD = 11.33). Male and female participants did not differ in amount of reported somatization; t (297) = -4.32, p = .67. Table 1 Descriptive Statistics M SD HAS Total Score 38.14 11.85 DSQ Immature Subdomain Score 88.54 22.51 ATS Total Score 12.56 4.62 Note. N = 302. 42 Table 2 Correlations between Demographic Variables and Total Scores on DSQ IDS, HAS Total, and ATS Total DSQ IDS HAS Total ATS Total R -.10 -.11 -.20** p .08 .06 .00 n 301 301 301 R -.21** .06 -.03 p .00 .31 .64 n 300 300 300 How often do you visit R -.06 -.25** .11 p .29 .00 .07 n 297 297 297 R -.14* -.22** -.07 p .02 .00 .28 n 285 285 285 Education Age a health clinic Annual Income Note. DSQ IDS = Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain score, HAS Total = Health Attitudes Survey total score, ATS = Attitudes Towards Seeking Professional Psychological Help—Short Form total score. * p < 0.05 (2-tailed). ** p < 0.01 (2-tailed). 43 Main Hypotheses Pearson product-moment correlational analyses were performed to determine whether there was a relationship between immature defense mechanisms, as measured by the Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain score and somatization, as measured by the Health Attitudes Survey total score. Results of the Pearson productmoment correlational analysis indicated a significant positive correlation (r = .33, p < .01) between the Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain score and the Health Attitudes Survey total score, indicating that higher use of immature defense mechanisms was associated with higher somatization. Pearson product-moment correlational analyses were conducted to assess the relationship between somatization, as measured by Health Attitudes Scale total score, and attitudes towards professional psychological help, as measured by Attitudes Towards Seeking Professional Psychological Help-Short Form total score. Results of the correlational analysis indicated that the relationship was non-significant. Mediation. Mediation is a statistical method used to identify the mechanism (third variable) that explains the relationship between an independent and dependent variable. Instead of looking directly at the relationship between an independent and dependent variable, in mediation, a third causal variable (mediator) is influenced by the independent variable and then influences the dependent variable (Baron & Kenny, 1986). Research has indicated that the majority of studies which include a formal test of mediation use the Baron and Kenny (1986) approach (MacKinnon et al., 2002). According to the Baron and Kenny method, in order to test for mediation, the following relationships must be examined: the relation between the predictor and the criterion 44 variables, the relation between the predictor and the mediator variables, and the relation between the mediator and criterion variables. All of these correlations must be significant in order for partial mediation to occur. For total mediation to occur, the relation between predictor and criterion should be reduced to zero after controlling for the relation between the mediator and criterion variables. Sobel test. According to Preacher and Hayes (2004), there are “more strategically rigorous methods by which mediation hypotheses may be assessed” (p. 718). One such way of directly testing an indirect effect is the Sobel test (Sobel, 1982). Whereas Baron and Kenny (1986) suggested using three separate regressions, Preacher and Hayes (2004) suggested directly and indirectly testing the hypothesized mediator through the indirect effect of independent variable on the dependent variable through the proposed mediator. The Sobel test is thought to be an improvement over the traditional Baron and Kenny method for several reasons. First, at the outset of statistical analysis when assessing for indirect effects, the total effect of the independent variable on the dependent variable does not have to be present. Unlike the Sobel test, the Baron and Kenny approach would miss a significant indirect effect when there is no evidence for a total effect (Preacher & Hayes, 2004). Second, according to Holmbeck, (2002, as cited in Preacher & Hayes, 2004) one of the drawbacks to the Baron and Kenny method is that this method has been shown to lead to Type I and Type II error. Third, compared to the series of regression analyses suggested by Baron and Kenny, the Sobel test more straightforwardly examines the mediation hypothesis by using a significance test associated with the indirect effect rather than a series of individual significance tests which do not directly examine the indirect effect (Preacher & Hayes, 2004). Finally, 45 research has indicated that the Baron and Kenny approach has low statistical power compared to the Sobel method (MacKinnon et al., 2002; Preacher & Hayes 2004). Bootstrapping. Bootstrapping is a nonparametric approach to hypothesis testing and effect-size estimation useful for countering problems such as asymmetry and nonnormality in the sampling distribution of ab (Preacher & Hayes, 2004). Bootstrapping can be utilized with smaller sample sizes, as it is not based on a large-sample theory. This method increases confidence in smaller samples. Results of Bootstrapping Using Sobel Mediation Test For hypothesis three, bootstrapping using the Sobel mediation test was performed to assess the indirect and direct influences among the independent and dependent variables and mediator (see Table 3). Results revealed that the Health Attitude Survey total score did not predict Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help total score, thereby violating one of the assumptions of mediation according to Preacher and Hays (2004). Neither total nor partial mediation occurred. Hypothesis 3 was rejected. The addition of the mediation analyses showed the directionality of the relationship between somatization and immature defense mechanisms, indicating a positive correlation. As the values on the Health Attitude Survey went up, so did the values on the Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain. More specifically, for every point the Health Attitudes Scale went up, the Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain went up .33 of a point. Supplementary Hypotheses In order to further clarify the relationship between somatization and immature 46 defense mechanisms, and to assess whether similar results could be achieved using the condensed version of the Health Attitudes Survey, additional correlational analyses were performed. Correlational analyses were conducted to assess the relationship between immature defense mechanisms and the Brief Health Attitudes Survey (a subset of items in the Health Attitude Survey found to best discriminate somatizing patients from nonsomatizing patients). Results of the correlational analysis indicated a significant positive correlation (r = .29, p < .01) between the Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain score and Brief Health Attitudes Scale total score indicating that higher use of immature defense mechanisms was associated with higher somatization. In order to determine whether or not the same results could be achieved using the brief version of the Health Attitudes Survey, Correlational analyses were conducted to assess the relationship between the Attitudes Towards Seeking Professional Help—Short Form and the Brief Health Attitudes Survey. Results of the correlational analysis indicated that the relationship was non-significant. In order to clarify which components of the HAS drive the relationship between somatization and immature defense mechanisms, correlational analyses were conducted to assess the relationship between the six subscales of the Health Attitudes Survey and Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain. Results of the correlational analysis indicated significant relationships between nearly all subscales at (p < .01) indicating that the Health Attitudes Survey and Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain scale are highly correlated (see Table 4). 47 Table 3 Between subjects effects of univariate regression Partial Observed Power Source Df F p Eta Squared Intercept 1 1.08 .300 .005 HAStotal * DSQimmature 45 0.78 .832 .148 .832 HAStotal 45 0.75 .875 .142 .807 1 0.31 .580 .002 .085 DSQimmature 1.79 Bootstrapping tests for mediation Direct And Total Effects Coefficient SE t p b (YX) -.02 .02 -0.97 .33 b (MX) .63 .10 6.07 .00 b (YM.X) .05 .01 3.77 .00 b (YX.M) -.05 .02 -2.18 .03 Indirect Effects and Significance Using Normal Distribution Sobel Value SE Z p .03 .01 3.20 .00 Bootstrap Results For Indirect Effect Effect M SE .03 .01 Note. 2-tailed tests. Y = ATS Total; X = HAS Total; M = DSQ IDS. 48 Table 4 Correlations between subscales of Health Attitudes Survey and Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain DSQ IDS a DWC FIW HUC EHW PD DC .15* .17** .06 .33** .31** .39** .37** .22** .17** .19** .25** .38** .38** .41** .36** .32** .35** .27** .50** .44** DWC FIW HUC EHW PD .48** Note. DSQ IDS = Defensive Style Questionnaire immature defense subdomain score, DWC = Health Attitudes Survey (HAS) Dissatisfaction with Care, FIW = HAS Frustration with Ill Health, HUC = HAS High Utilization of Care, EHW = HAS Excessive Health Worry, PD = HAS Psychological Distress, DC = HAS Discordant Communication. * p < 0.05 level (2-tailed). ** p < 0.01 level (2-tailed). 49 Chapter V: Discussion This study is one of the very few studies to investigate the relationship between somatization and psychological defense mechanisms in a primary care population. First, this study found a significant and positive relationship between immature defense mechanisms and somatization. Results of the present study showed that, as endorsement of somatization increases, so does endorsement of the use of immature defense mechanisms; confirming hypothesis one, that higher scores of somatization are associated with higher scores of immature defense mechanisms. This result is in accordance with previous findings, which indicate a relationship between unconscious defensive processes and somatization (Deshpande et al., 2011; Xiao & Fu, 2006). Results from the current study suggest that the relationship between current behavioral descriptions of somatization and the theoretical, psychoanalytic conceptualization of psychosomatic processes is worth further investigation. The unique aspect of findings from the present study is that continuous variables were used to indicate whether increases in somatization are related to increases in immature defenses. Though research has examined the relationship of defense mechanisms to medically unexplained symptoms, very little research has specifically examined the construct of somatization and its relationship to immature psychiatric defenses and, to this researcher’s knowledge, studies have yet to explore somatization and psychological defenses on continua. Present findings showed that somatization was an independent positive predictor of immature defense mechanisms among primary care patients. Somatization predicted nearly all domains of the Defensive Style Questionnaire—40 immature defense 50 subdomain. Specifically, the following five out of six domains of the Health Attitudes Survey were positively correlated with the Defensive Style Questionnaire—40 immature defense subdomain: dissatisfaction with care, frustration will ill health, excessive health worry, psychological distress, and discordant communication. One subdomain of the Health Attitudes Survey, utilization of care, was not related to the endorsement of immature defenses. One possible reason for this was that sample size did not provide adequate power, as approximately 67% of participants chose not to answer items pertaining to number of office visits. These novel findings support the notion that somatization might have a strong influence in number of defenses endorsed. In other words, the behavioral description of somatizing individuals (communicating psychological pain though bodily complaints and continually seeking medical help for bodily symptoms) is indicative of specific defensive processes, such as rationalization, autistic fantasy, displacement, isolation, dissociation, devaluation, splitting, denial, passive aggression, somatization, acting out, and projection. This connection may lead to a better understanding of psychosomatic behavior. For example, somatizing individuals may use the defense mechanism splitting to unconsciously split the mind and body into two unrelated constructs. If this is the case, an explanation of the connection between mind and body may prove beneficial when working with somatizing individuals. In summary, the link found between somatization and immature defense mechanisms provides support for the psychoanalytically based etiological theory of somatization: Somatizing individuals may control anxiety by unconsciously converting psychological distress into somatic symptoms. Understanding 51 the connection between the etiology and behavioral manifestations of somatization may lead to more effective and efficient treatment for these individuals. Findings did not support the hypothesis that somatization is related to negative attitudes towards professional psychological help; disconfirming hypothesis two. Findings of the current study were in contrast to those in the literature, which suggest that individuals who present with psychosomatic syndromes have negative attitudes towards mental illness and seeking mental health treatment (e.g., Freidl et al., 2009). However, to this researcher’s knowledge, there is limited literature (if any) exploring somatizing patients’ particular attitudes towards the personal usefulness of psychological help or somatizers’ opinions of the abilities of mental health professionals. One possible reason for the lack of association between somatization and negative attitudes may be that negative attitudes towards health providers specifically applies to medical personnel and does not extend to mental health providers (e.g., psychologists, social workers). Current literature suggests that individuals with somatization disorders have labeled physicians in a negative manner (Groves, 1978; Lipsitt, 1970); but there is little to no information regarding somatizer’s opinions of particular mental health workers (e.g., psychologists, social workers). It is also possible that individuals who persistently somatize endorse negative attitudes specifically towards mental illness (Bridges et al., 1991) but not towards mental health professionals who treat the psychiatric problems. Furthermore, I hypothesized that immature defense mechanisms would mediate the relationship between somatization and attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help. Results indicated that increased somatization was not related to increased negative attitudes towards professional psychological help. According to 52 Baron and Kenny (1986), this violates an assumption of mediation: There must be a nonzero relationship between the independent variable and the dependent variable. Therefore, partial mediation was not present and hypothesis three was rejected. Results indicated a significant relationship between immature defense mechanisms and somatization using the Brief Health Attitudes Survey. There was not a relationship between negative attitudes and somatization using the Brief Health Attitudes Survey. These findings replicated the findings with the extended version of the Health Attitudes Survey, further solidifying original findings that, though there is a significant relationship between immature defense mechanisms and somatization, there is not a significant relationship between somatization and attitudes towards professional psychological help. These results suggest that the brief version may be a more efficient screening tool for assessing for the presence of somatization in future studies. This study demonstrated how rates of somatization, immature defense mechanisms, and attitudes towards professional psychological help differed as a function of demographic characteristics. Attitudes towards professional psychological help differed as a function of education: As level of education increased, negative attitudes towards professional psychological help decreased. This finding is consistent with the literature which indicates that higher levels of education are associated with willingness to engage in psychological help-seeking behavior (Horwitz, 1987). The use of immature defense mechanisms differed as a function of age and annual income: As age increased, use of immature defense mechanisms decreased. This finding is consistent with previous literature, which indicates that, as age increases, so does the use of mature defense mechanisms (Vaillant, 1993). Results of the current study indicated that, as annual 53 income increased, use of immature defense mechanisms decreased. Lastly, somatization differed as a function of annual income and office visitations: As annual income increased, somatization decreased. This finding is consistent with the literature, which suggests that individuals of low socioeconomic status tend to engage in somatization more frequently than those of a higher economic class (Kirmayer & Looper, 2007; Smith, Monson, & Livingston, 1985). Results of the current study also indicated that, as office visits increased, endorsement of somatization decreased. This finding is in sharp contrast to an overwhelming volume of literature which suggests that somatizing individuals are frequent attenders and chronically utilize unnecessary medical services (Cucciare & O’Donohue, 2003; Hiller & Fichter, 2004; Peters et al., 1998). There are several possible factors that may have influenced this puzzling finding. First, physicians have been known to have aversive reactions to somatizing individuals (Hiller & Fichter, 2004). Therefore, it is possible that health care providers were reluctant to continue scheduling somatizing individuals, which led to a decrease in office visits. The current study specifically measured primary care office visits. Somatizing individuals frequently seek out multiple types of medical assistance. It is possible that frequency of visitation was not captured as visitations to specialty clinics and multiple PCP clinics were not assessed. Women are often over-represented among individuals with psychosomatic disorders, both in the community and clinical settings (4th ed., text rev.; DSM–IV–TR; American Psychiatric Association, 2000; Woolfolk & Allen, 2007). However, in the current study, women were not more likely to somatize than men. Results of the current study are in contrast with the literature, which suggests that women are more likely to report psychosomatic symptoms and seek help for such symptoms (Kroenke & Spitzer, 54 1998). The current results are supported by other findings (Hartung & Widiger, 1998), which suggest that prevalence rates of somatoform spectrum disorders may be biased, with females receiving more somatoform diagnoses than men. There was not a relationship between age and amount of somatization endorsed. This finding is in contrast to current literature, which indicates that amount of somatization increases with age (Kocalevent, Hinz, & Brähler, 2013). Limitations This study had several limitations. First, the exclusive use of self-report measures is a potential limitation. Research has indicated that self-report defense mechanism assessments may be problematic (Davidson & MacGregor, 1998). Participants are required to assess their own defensive processes, which some suggest may result in problems with the validity of self-report measures (Mehlman & Slane, 1994). Research has indicated a link between somatization and fear of stigmatization (Freidl, 2007). It is possible that, due to fear of stigma, patients underreported symptoms, attitudes, and defenses, distorting the results. In addition, as this investigation relied on voluntary participation, it is possible that results were biased by the self-selection of respondents. There may have been substantial differences between individuals who chose to participate and individuals who chose not participate. It is also possible that the presence of physiological illness or injury skewed results. State effects may have influenced results. For example, if patients were feeling particularity good or bad at the time they filled out the questionnaire, their answers may have been more negative or positive. The presence of abnormal illness behavior in somatizing patients is a potential limitation of this study. Individuals 55 engaging in somatization have been found to present with health complaints (e.g., pain, discomfort) in excess of that which is expected by medical professionals (Pilowsky, 1997). It is possible that some somatizing individuals refused to participate in the study due to somatic pain or discomfort. In addition, there may be problems with the external validity of this study. Participants included a predominately White sample (91.1%). Because of this, the results may not generalize to other populations. Participants included primary care patients at a large family medicine clinic in the Midwest. Primary care may attract a particular type of somatizer and clinically significant somatizers may have been missed due to population limitations. This study did not include patients visiting other branches of medicine. Results may have differed if tertiary care patients, or patients referred to more specialized consultative care were included. Finally, this study measured conceptually distinct, yet potentially overlapping, constructs. However, multicolinearity is assumed in simple mediation. To reduce potential problems with discriminant validity, items pertaining to somatization were not included in the DSQ-40. Due to altercations made, the reliability and validity of the version used in this study may not be representative of the reliability and validity evidenced in previous studies of the DSQ-40. Future Directions The goal of the present study was to determine whether or not there was a relationship between the use of immature defense mechanisms and somatization. Though the current study identified a relationship between these two variables, the mechanism 56 underlying the relationship between somatization and immature defense mechanisms is unclear. Future investigations might consider a more in-depth analysis of the relationship between defensive styles and somatization to determine causal factors of the relationship. Specifically, it would be beneficial for future research to clarify whether the use immature defense mechanisms causes an increase in psychosomatic behavior or whether increased psychosomatic behavior causes an increase in use of immature defense mechanisms. Additionally, future studies should include comparisons of mature defense mechanisms versus immature defense mechanisms in terms of their predictive power regarding somatization to determine whether or not immaturity of defenses is the critical issue. Participants in the current study were all patients of a primary care clinic. Current literature indicates that somatization occurs in almost all medical specialty clinics, with patient populations at each branch of medicine having unique and distinctive presentations of somatization (Smith, Conway, & Cole, 2009). For example, according to Smith et al., the characteristic expression of somatization in internal medicine patients is thought to be chronic fatigue syndrome; in dentistry, temporomandibular joint syndrome. Further research examining the type and number of psychiatric defenses and presence of psychosomatic behavior of patients in specialty clinics would aid in further establishing the relationship of the two variables across settings and would contribute to the understanding of connections between medically unexplained symptoms, somatization, and unconscious defensive processes. Participants in the current study were predominately White. Somatization occurs worldwide (Kirmayer & Looper, 2007). However, some geographic regions and 57 ethnocultural groups have a higher prevalence rate of somatization and somatoform disorders (Kirmayer & Young, 1998). Future studies should investigate defense mechanisms, somatization, and attitudes using a more ethnically and culturally diverse population. In addition, results of the current study indicated multiple relationships between various demographic variables and somatization, attitudes towards professional psychological help, and immature defense mechanisms. Future studies further assessing specific relationships among these variables would lead to a greater understanding of the effects of demographics on mental health attitudes, somatization, and defensive processes. Also regarding demographics, in future studies, regressions should be utilized to enter in significant control variables. To this researcher’s knowledge, the current study was the first study to utilize a primary care setting to explore the relationship of somatization to attitudes towards mental health professionals. Future studies should address the relationship between immature defense mechanisms and attitudes towards medical professionals. The general idea is that individuals engaging in somatization have negative attitudes towards medical personnel (Noyes et al., 1999). Though current literature highlights connections between somatization and negative attitudes towards physicians (Blackwell, & De Morgan, 1996; Noyes et al., 1999), to this researcher’s knowledge, research has yet to be conducted to determine if there is a relationship between somatization, negative attitudes towards physicians, and immature defense mechanisms. This research would help health professionals further understand the barriers to effective care (such as unconscious defensive processes), particular attitudes somatizing patients are likely to have, and ways to provide services to individuals who present with these particular barriers. 58 The current study relied solely on patient self-report. Future studies should be designed to replicate, validate, and expand findings using non-self-report methodology. For example, the presence of somatization could be determined using the PRIME-MD (Spitzer et al., 1994). The PRIME-MD is a somatization detection tool comprised of a patient questionnaire and a clinician evaluation guide. Alternatively, the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV-TR (SCID) could be utilized to confirm the presence of somatization (First, Spitzer, Gibbon, & Williams, 2002). The SCID is an established diagnostic tool considered standard in clinical research. Future research could impose the category of “somatizer” onto the dimension somatization to compare groups regarding level of immature defenses and amount of negative attitudes. In other words, future studies could utilize cut-off scores for somatization from the HAS to examine characteristics of somatizers versus healthy controls. These investigations could include qualitative data for more in-depth responses. As there was multicolinearity between the Defensive Style Questionnaire—40 immature defense subdomain and the Health Attitudes Survey, future investigation of these scales is warranted to identify whether somatization and immature defenses are similar constructs. There are multiple theories of effective treatment strategies for somatization, some empirical investigation of them, and little conclusive evidence. Many researchers and professionals support the notion that a cognitive-behavioral approach to somatization may be effective (Woolfolk & Allen, 2007), while some believe in a mindfulness-based approach (Fjorback et al., 2012, 2013), and others in a more psychodynamically-based approach (Smith et al., 2009). In addition, some suggest that a psychopharmacological 59 approach may be appropriate, highlighting the usefulness of antidepressants (Stahl, 2003). Whatever the treatment preference, most researchers and clinicians agree that there is no standard of care for somatization. Future research should determine how effective particular therapies are for treating individuals who persistently somatize as well as the effective components of each approach. Clinical Implications Researchers and practitioners are in agreement that somatization is not only common in primary care but is on the rise (Kirmayer & Looper, 2007; Smith et al., 2009). Due to this, health professionals need to develop specific plans for the identification, management, and treatment of somatizing individuals. Results of the current study indicated that, as somatization increases, so does the use of immature defense mechanisms. This finding has implications for the treatment of somatizing individuals. Mental and medical health professionals should bear in mind the underlying defensive personality structure of somatizing individuals as adapting treatment to fit patient’s level of defensive functioning has been found to increase alliance between practitioner and patient (Despland, de Roten, Despars, Stigler, & Perry, 2001). It would be useful for individuals involved in the provision of health care services to understand the psychological processes associated with immature defenses so that treatment could be adjusted accordingly. If health practitioners are aware that individuals currently somatizing are likely to make use of particular defenses, they may be able to intervene in a manner which reduces the need for utilizing immature defenses. It is helpful for health professionals to know that the use of immature defenses is a negative indicator of level of interpersonal and global functioning (Cramer, 1991, 60 2000). The persistent use of immature defense mechanisms in adulthood is associated with psychopathology (Vaillant, 1994). In fact, research has indicated that individuals who are found to have a psychiatric disorder are likely to engage in the use of immature defense mechanisms (Cramer, 2000). Knowing that the use of immature defense mechanisms often leads to emotional problems and the inability to cope effectively (Vaillant, 1998), the groundwork for treatment should be established early in the treatment process and should include a combination of interventions. The groundwork for treatment involves a multidisciplinary approach. According to Kirmayer and Looper (2007) “all symptoms should be treated as having both physiological and psychological dimensions and should be investigated and treated at multiple levels” (p. 439). Current literature supports this notion and indicates that a combination of consultation and collaboration between PCP, patient, and mental health professional in conjunction with psychopharmacological agents may be key (Anderson & Winkler, 2006; Matalon, Nahmani, Rabin, Maoz, & Hart, 2002; van der Feltz-Cornelis, Hoedeman, Keuter, & Swinkels, 2012). When working with the somatizing patient, the language used when referring a patient to psychotherapy is essential, as somatizing patients tend to have high levels of concern regarding stigma associated with mental health treatment (Freidl, 2007). Results of the current study indicated that, as somatization increases, negative attitudes towards psychotherapists or psychotherapy does not increase. Therefore, it is possible that stigma prevents somatizing individuals from engaging in psychotherapy, not negative attitudes towards the mental health professionals. To decrease stigma, explanations and examples provided by medical professionals of the mind-body connection may be particularly 61 important. For example, using phrases such as “you’re more prone to headaches with daily stressors and having someone assist you in managing your stress level could help to manage your headaches” may be particularly useful. As negative attitudes towards psychological help are not barriers to treatment, health care professionals could aim at countering the underlying anxiety or stigma attached to attending mental health facilities. As somatizing individuals do not think poorly of mental health professionals, decreasing anxiety and stigma may increase acceptance of referral to psychological care. These referrals could greatly reduce somatization in primary care, reducing the escalating health care costs. When working with chronic somatizers, referring for treatment of the underlying psychiatric problem is a complex and delicate process and the addition of immature defensive processes only complicates referral further. However, psychotherapy has been found to decrease immature defense use (Cramer & Blatt, 1993). Research indicates that, among patients with psychiatric problems, patients who show the most reduction in use of immature defenses show greatest improvement in functioning (Cramer, 1999). Being able to change the defense mechanism itself may lead to changes in psychosomatic behavior. Psychosomatic behavior may be maintained by the particular use of immature defenses. According to Perry, Presniak, and Olson (2013), even a small amount of gratification earned from engaging in the defense mechanism maintains the use of the mechanisms. When physicians are confronted with psychogenic symptoms, it can be quite easy for them to focus solely on the somatic symptom and ignore the context in which the symptom is presented. Certainly, from a professional perspective, it is 62 important to routinely inquire about somatic symptoms and investigate for the presence of injury and illness. However, it is imperative that physicians be aware of the potential of psychogenic origins to problems and should consider patients with somatization to be a large portion of their caseload. Concluding Comment The conceptualization of somatization as a form of abnormal illness behavior seems to be growing in popularity. This shift away from the traditional psychoanalytic conceptualization of somatization may be premature, as the current study indicated that links between behaviors found in somatizing individuals and unconscious defensive processes exist. 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ICD-10, the ICD-10 classification of mental and behavioral disorders: Diagnostic criteria for research. Geneva: World Health Organization. Xiao, L., & Fu, S. (2006). Defense mechanism and its related factors in patients with persistent somatoform pain disorder. Chinese Journal of Clinical Psychology, 14, 395-396. Retrieved from http://www.oriprobe.com/journals/zglcxlxzz.html 79 Appendix A Implied Consent Form Implied Informed Consent Form for Social Science Research Roosevelt University Principal Investigator: Brynne Messner, MA, Graduate Student 360 E South Water #2412 Chicago, IL 60601 (316)393-2040; [email protected] Faculty Supervisor: Dr. Kimberly Dienes 430 South Michigan Ave. AUD 1255-Tower Chicago, IL 60605 (312)341-3799; [email protected] Other Investigator(s): Ryan Mulloy, Graduate Student 1. Purpose of the Study: The purpose of this research study is to explore the opinions of patients in primary care clinics. For example, the current study will examine patient’s satisfaction with current medical care and patient’s attitudes towards various health care professionals. 2. Procedures to be followed: You will be asked to answer questions on three different surveys. You will also be asked to answer basic demographic questions. 3. Duration: It will take approximately 15-20 minutes to complete the surveys. 4. Statement of Confidentiality: Your participation in this research is confidential. Your name is in no way linked to your responses and the information you provide will NOT be available to the medical staff or submitted to your patient file. 5. Right to Ask Questions: Please contact Brynne Messner, MA at (316) 393-2040 with questions or concerns about this study. If you would like to speak with someone other than the researchers, you may contact the Roosevelt University Institutional Review Board at (312) 853- 4774. If you have questions about the rights of participants, you may contact the Faculty Research Ethics Officer at (312) 341-2440. 80 6. Voluntary Participation: Your decision to be in this research is voluntary. You can stop at any time. You do not have to answer any questions you do not want to answer. If you would like to discontinue the study, please place the packet in the covered bin labeled “surveys” or hand the questionnaire back to the individual who distributed it to you. You must be 18 years of age or older to take part in this research study. Completion and return of the survey implies that you have read the information in this form and consent to take part in the research. Please keep this form for your records or future reference. 81 Appendix B Instructions for Participants ●Complete all pages of this packet at any time during your visit today. ●When you are finished, please place this questionnaire into the envelope provided and put it into the box labeled “questionnaires” before you leave. ●Thank you for your participation! 82 Appendix C Personal Information Questionnaire Today’s date: _______________ What is your gender (circle one)? Male Female What is your age? ______ What is your ethnicity (check one)? □ White (Not Hispanic) □ Black, African-American □ American Indian or Alaska Native □ Asian □ Hispanic or Latino □ Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander □ Other: _____________________ How often do you visit this clinic? The WWFP clinic: □ this is the first time □ once a week □ once a month □ every six months □ every year □ every two years or longer The emergency room: □ this is the first time □ once a week □ once a month □ every six months □ every year □ every two years or longer Please check your total, annual family income level: _____ Less than $10,000 _____ $10,000 - $14,999 _____ $15,000 - $24,999 _____ $25,000 - $34,999 _____ $35,000 - $49,999 _____ $50,000 - $74,999 _____ $75,000 - $99,999 _____ $100,000 - $149,999 _____ $150,000 - $199,999 _____ $200,000 or more What is the highest level of education you have completed (check one)? □ never graduated high school □ high school diploma □ college 83 □ graduate program □ doctoral degree □ professional degree □ other____________ What is your current relationship status? □ married □ partnered □ separated □ divorced □ single □ other____________ 84 Appendix D Defensive Style Questionnaire-40 Instructions: This questionnaire consists of a number of statements about personal attitudes. There are no right or wrong answers. Using the 9-point scale shown below, please indicate how much you agree or disagree with each statement by circling one of the numbers on the scale beside the statement. For example, a score of 5 would indicate that you neither agree nor disagree with the statement, a score of 3 that you moderately disagree, a score of 9 that you strongly agree. 1. I get satisfaction from helping others and if this were taken away from me I would get depressed. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 2. I’m able to keep a problem out of my mind until I have the time to deal with it. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 3. I work out my anxiety through doing something constructive and creative like painting or woodwork. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 4. I am able to laugh at myself pretty easily. 1 2 3 4 5 6 8 9 5. I am able to find good reasons for everything I do. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 6. People tend to mistreat me. 1 2 3 4 9 5 6 7 7 8 7. If someone mugged me and stole my money, I’d rather he be helped than punished. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 85 8. People say, I tend to ignore unpleasant facts as if they didn’t exist. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 9. I ignore danger as if I were superman. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 10. I pride myself on my ability to cut people down to size. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 9 11. I often act impulsively when something is bothering me. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 12. I get physically ill when things aren’t going well for me. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 13. I’m a very inhibited person. 1 2 3 4 5 9 6 7 8 14. I get more satisfaction from my fantasies than from my real life. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 15. I’ve special talents that allow me to go through life with no problems. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 16. There are always good reasons when things don’t work out for me. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 17. I work more things out in my daydreams than in my real life. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 18. I fear nothing. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 19. Sometimes I think I’m an angel and other times I think I’m a devil. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 20. I get openly aggressive when I feel hurt. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 21. I always feel that someone I know is like a guardian angel. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 86 22. As far as I’m concerned, people are either good or bad. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 23. If my boss bugged me, I might make a mistake in my work or work more slowly so as to get back at him. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 24. There is someone I know who can do anything and who is absolutely fair and just. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 25. I can keep the lid on my feelings if letting them out would interfere with what I am doing. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 26. I’m usually able to see the funny side of an otherwise painful predicament. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 27. I get a headache when I have to do something I don’t like. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 28. I often find myself to be nice to people who by all rights I should be angry at. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 29. I am sure I get a raw deal from life. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 30. When I have to face a difficult situation I try to imagine what it will be like and plan ways to cope with it. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 31. Doctors never really understand what is wrong with me. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 32. After I fight for my rights, I tend to apologize for my assertiveness. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 33. When I depressed or anxious, eating makes me feel better. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 87 34. I’m often told that I don’t show my feelings. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 35. If I can predict that I’m going to be sad ahead of time, I can cope better. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 36. No matter how much I complain, I never get a satisfactory response. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 37. Often I find that I don’t feel anything when the situation would seem to warrant strong emotions. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 38. Sticking to the task at hand keeps me from feeling depressed or anxious. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 39. If I were in a crisis, I would seek out another person who had the same problem. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 40. If I have an aggressive thought, I feel the need to do something to compensate for it. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 88 Appendix E Attitudes Toward Seeking Professional Psychological Help-Short Form Please Circle One of the Following: 1. If I believed I was having a mental breakdown, my first inclination would be to get help from a mental health professional. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 2. The idea of talking about problems with a mental health professional strikes me as a poor way to get rid of emotional conflicts. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 3. If I were experiencing a serious emotional crisis at this point in my life, I would be confident that I could find relief in psychotherapy. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 4. There is something admirable in the attitude of a person who is willing to cope with his or her conflicts and fears without resorting to professional psychological help. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 5. I would want to get psychological help if I were worried of upset for a long period of time. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 6. I might want to have psychological counseling in the future. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 7. A person with an emotional problem is not likely to solve it alone; he or she is likely to solve it with professional help. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 8. Considering the time and expense involved in psychotherapy, it would have doubtful value for a person like me. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 89 9. A person should work on his or her own problems; getting psychological counseling would be a last resort. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 10. Personal and emotional troubles, like many things, tend to work out by themselves. Agree Partly Agree Partly Disagree Disagree 90 Appendix F Health Attitudes Survey Please Circle One of The Following: 1. I have been satisfied with the medical care that I have received. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 2. Doctors have done the best they could to diagnose and treat my health problems. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree 3. Doctors have taken my health problems seriously. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 4. My health problems have been thoroughly evaluated. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 5. Doctors do not seem to know much about the health problems that I have had. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree 6. My health problems have been completely explained. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 7. Doctors seem to think I am exaggerating my health problems. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree 8. My response to treatment has not been satisfactory. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 9. My response to treatment is usually excellent. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 10. I am tired of feeling sick and would like to get to the bottom of my health problems. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 11. I have felt ill for quite a while now. Strongly Disagree Disagree 91 12. I am going to keep searching for an answer to my health problems. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 13. I do not think there is anything seriously wrong with my body. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree Agree Strongly Agree 14. I have seen many different doctors over the years. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 15. I have taken a lot of medicine recently. Strongly Disagree Disagree 16. I do not go to the doctor often. Strongly Disagree Disagree 17. I have had relatively good health over the years. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 18. I sometimes worry too much about my health. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 19. I often fear the worst when I develop symptoms. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 20. I have trouble getting my mind off my health. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral 21. Sometimes I feel depressed and cannot seem to shake it off. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 22. I have sought health for emotional and stress related problems. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 23. It is easy to relax and stay calm. Strongly Disagree Disagree 24. I believe the stress I am under may be affecting my health. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 92 25. Some people think that I am capable of more work than I feel able to do. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 26. Some people think that I have been sick just to gain attention. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree 27. It is difficult for me to find the right words for my feelings. Strongly Disagree Disagree Neutral Agree Strongly Agree