Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6233140 Journal of Affective Disorders 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveWe sought to determine whether meaningful subtypes of Dysthymic patients could be identified when grouping them by similar personality profiles.MethodA random, national sample of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists (n=1201) described a randomly selected current patient with personality pathology using the descriptors in the Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedure‐II (SWAP‐II), completed assessments of patients' adaptive functioning, and provided DSM-IV Axis I and II diagnoses.ResultsWe applied Q-factor cluster analyses to those patients diagnosed with Dysthymic Disorder. Four clusters were identified-High Functioning, Anxious/Dysphoric, Emotionally Dysregulated, and Narcissistic. These factor scores corresponded with a priori hypotheses regarding diagnostic comorbidity and level of adaptive functioning. We compared these groups to diagnostic constructs described and empirically identified in the past literature.ConclusionsThe results converge with past and current ideas about the ways in which chronic depression and personality are related and offer an enhanced means by which to understand a heterogeneous diagnostic category that is empirically grounded and clinically useful.

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