Overview: hypochondriasis, bodily complaints, and somatic styles
- 1 March 1983
- journal article
- review article
- Published by American Psychiatric Association Publishing in American Journal of Psychiatry
- Vol. 140 (3) , 273-283
- https://doi.org/10.1176/ajp.140.3.273
Abstract
Hypochondriasis can be conceptualized in four ways: 1) as a psychiatric syndrome composed of "functional" somatic symptoms, fear of disease, bodily preoccupation, and the persistent pursuit of medical care, 2) psychodynamically, as a derivative of aggressive or oral drives or as a defense against guilt or low self-esteem, 3) as a perceptual amplification of bodily sensations and their cognitive misinterpretation, and 4) as socially learned illness behavior eliciting interpersonal rewards. There is evidence supporting each of these views, but much more investigation is needed. The authors propose the general concept of somatic style--in particular, an amplifying style--which could be used to investigate symptom formation, bodily perception, and medical illness as a psychological and social event.Keywords
This publication has 52 references indexed in Scilit:
- Depression and somatization: a reviewThe American Journal of Medicine, 1982
- HypochondriasisArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1981
- Development of Psychological Distress Among Young AdultsArchives of General Psychiatry, 1979
- PSYCHOLOGICAL DIMENSIONS AND PERCEPTUAL ANALYSES, INCLUDING PATHOLOGIES OF PAINPublished by Elsevier ,1978
- Perceptual style and pain tolerance—II the influence of an anxiolytic agentJournal of Psychosomatic Research, 1973
- Perceptual style and pain tolerance—I. The influence of certain psychological factorsJournal of Psychosomatic Research, 1973
- PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGIC AND CONVERSION REACTIONS IN CHILDREN: Selective Incidence in Verbal and Nonverbal FamiliesJournal of the American Academy of Child Psychiatry, 1970
- Unconscious Factors in the Psychodynamics of the Hypochondriacal PatientPsychosomatics, 1963
- “Psychogenic” pain and the pain-prone patientThe American Journal of Medicine, 1959
- RELATIONSHIP OF SIGNIFICANCE OF WOUND TO PAIN EXPERIENCEDJAMA, 1956