The Interpersonal Model of Health Anxiety: Testing predicted paths and model specificity

Kathryn A. Birnie, Simon B. Sherry, Sarah Doucette, Dayna L. Sherry, Heather D. Hadjistavropoulos, Sherry H. Stewart

Résultat de recherche: Articleexamen par les pairs

11 Citations (Scopus)

Résumé

Health anxiety involves persistent worry about one's health and is characterized by dysfunctional interpersonal processes such as excessive health-related reassurance-seeking and feelings of alienation from others. Cognitive-behavioral models largely ignore cyclical, interpersonally averse behaviors and social cognitions observed amongst health anxious individuals. The Interpersonal Model of Health Anxiety (IMHA) proposes health anxiety is maintained through activated anxious attachment insecurities, which drive frequent, but ineffective, health-related reassurance-seeking from others. Such excessive health-related reassurance-seeking leads to health-related alienation and beliefs others are unconcerned about one's perceived health problems. Feeling alienated from others fuels further health-related worry, resulting in continued self-defeating attempts at health-related reassurance-seeking. The present study offers the first comprehensive articulation and test of the IMHA. Using a cross-sectional design and 107 undergraduates, path analysis supported five of six hypothesized paths in the model; all paths except that from anxious attachment to health-related reassurance-seeking were significant and in the expected direction. Specificity tests suggested anxious attachment was more central than avoidant attachment to the IMHA. The present test of the IMHA as a single, coherent model provides a conceptual foundation for future research on interpersonal processes in health anxiety. Clinical implications are discussed.

Langue d'origineEnglish
Pages (de-à)856-861
Nombre de pages6
JournalPersonality and Individual Differences
Volume54
Numéro de publication7
DOI
Statut de publicationPublished - mai 2013

Note bibliographique

Funding Information:
This study was supported by the Dalhousie University Research Development Fund for the Humanities and Social Sciences and by the Capital Health Research Fund .

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General Psychology

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