期刊名称:Journal of Cognitive-Behavioral Psychotherapy and Research
印刷版ISSN:2146-9490
出版年度:2019
卷号:8
期号:3
DOI:10.5455/JCBPR.41475
语种:English
出版社:International Medical Journal Management and Indexing System
摘要:The goal of research is to assess the preference for consistency, cognitive fusion and experiential avoidance levels and their of persons with delusional persecution delusions, and interrelationship of these items. In addition, it was aimed to investigate the attitudes of individuals with persecution delusions towards the inconsistency of the relationship with other cognitions and their discomfort caused by inconsistency. The patient group with delusions consisted of 82 patients was who were diagnosed with schizophrenia, schizophreniform, schizoaffective disorder, delusional disorder, unspecified psychotic For the control group, 86 people who showed similar characteristics were included in the study Participants in both groups fill form for the Sociodemographic Data Form, Preference for Consistency Scale (PFC), Peters Delusion Inventory (PDI, only items for Persecutory Delusion), Cognitive Fusion Scale (CFQ), acceptance and Action questionnaire-II (AAQ-II) themselves. In addition, the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS, only positive symptom subscale) was applied by the researcher in the patient group with delusions. There was a significant difference between the patient group with delusions and the control group for the scores of PFC, AAQ-II and CFQ (p<0.025) Positive correlations were found between scores of PFC, AAQ-II, CFQ, PDI and PDI subscales in patient group with delusions in terms of psychological flexibility and preference for consistency (p<0.05) Findings obtained; the patients with persecutiory delusions are more psychologically inflexible than the healthy ones and they attach more importance to consistency. preference for consistency and psychological flexibility are also related to attitudes towards delusions.
关键词:psychotic disorders; delusions; cognition acceptance and commitment therapy; verbal behavior