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Gepubliceerd in: Cognitive Therapy and Research 1/2006

01-02-2006

A Test of Core Assumptions of the Catastrophic Misinterpretation Model of Panic Disorder

Auteurs: David W. Austin, Jeffrey C. Richards

Gepubliceerd in: Cognitive Therapy and Research | Uitgave 1/2006

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Abstract

The catastrophic misinterpretation model of panic disorder proposes that spontaneous panic attacks are the result of misinterpretation of harmless autonomic arousal as precursors to physical (e.g. heart attack) or psychological (e.g. insanity) emergency. Mixed research findings to date have provided equivocal support. A modified form of the Body Sensations Interpretation Questionnaire was used to investigate core assumptions of the model amongst 38 people with panic disorder (PD), 20 with non-clinical panic, 21 with social anxiety disorder, and 34 non-anxious controls. The PD group gave more harm-related interpretations of ambiguous internal stimuli than all other groups only when anxiety-related responses (e.g. “I'm going to panic”) were scored as harm, however there was no evidence that anxiety-related interpretations were masking perceived catastrophic physical or psychological outcomes. Despite this, people with PD rated harm and anxiety outcomes as more negative than non-anxious controls. Results failed to unequivocally support core assumptions of the model.
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Metagegevens
Titel
A Test of Core Assumptions of the Catastrophic Misinterpretation Model of Panic Disorder
Auteurs
David W. Austin
Jeffrey C. Richards
Publicatiedatum
01-02-2006
Uitgeverij
Springer US
Gepubliceerd in
Cognitive Therapy and Research / Uitgave 1/2006
Print ISSN: 0147-5916
Elektronisch ISSN: 1573-2819
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10608-006-9010-4

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