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The Relationship Between Hypochondriasis and Medical Illness
Arthur J. Barsky, MD;
Grace Wyshak, PhD;
Kathleen S. Latham, MEd;
Gerald L. Klerman, MD
Arch Intern Med. 1991;151(1):84-88.
Abstract
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Forty-one Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disor ders-Ill-Revised hypochondriacs were accrued from a primary care practice. Seventy-five control subjects were selected at random from among the remainder of the patients in the same clinic. All subjects completed a structured diagnostic interview and standardized self-report questionnaires. Medical morbidity was assessed with a medical record audit and with primary physicians' ratings. The hypochondriacal and comparison sam ples did not differ in aggregate medical morbidity, although the hypochondriacal sample had more undiagnosed complaints and nonspecific findings in their medical records. Within the compar ison sample, higher levels of medical morbidity were associated with higher levels of hypochondriacal symptoms. This occurred primarily because the most serious medical disorders were as sociated with more bodily preoccupation, disease conviction, and somatization. Within the hypochondriacal sample, no corre lation was found between the degree of hypochondriasis and the extent of medical morbidity.
(Arch Intern Med. 1991;151:84-88)
Author Affiliations
From the Department of Psychiatry (Dr Barsky), Harvard Medical School; Psychiatry Service (Dr Barsky and Ms Latham), Massachusetts General Hos pital; Department of Biostatistics and Center for Population Studies, Harvard School of Public Health (Dr Wyshak), Boston, Mass; and Department of Psychi atry, Cornell University Medical College, New York, NY (Dr Klerman).
Footnotes
Accepted for publication August 30, 1990.
Reprint requests to the Massachusetts General Hospital, Warren 631, Fruit Street, Boston, MA 02114 (Dr Barsky).
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