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Cited by 12 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, parcopresis has been associated with avoidance of public and social situations. 3 The inability to initiate or sustain micturition or defecation is underpinned by an overwhelming fear of scrutiny 2a fear commonly associated with social anxiety disorder (SAD). Past research has argued that paruresis should be classified as a subtype of SAD because of overlap in symptoms 1,4 and the primarily socially anxious disposition of those with paruresis (eg avoidance strategies, overwhelming fear of negative evaluation).…”
Section: Associated Psychopathology and Comorbiditymentioning
confidence: 99%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…Similarly, parcopresis has been associated with avoidance of public and social situations. 3 The inability to initiate or sustain micturition or defecation is underpinned by an overwhelming fear of scrutiny 2a fear commonly associated with social anxiety disorder (SAD). Past research has argued that paruresis should be classified as a subtype of SAD because of overlap in symptoms 1,4 and the primarily socially anxious disposition of those with paruresis (eg avoidance strategies, overwhelming fear of negative evaluation).…”
Section: Associated Psychopathology and Comorbiditymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Past research has argued that paruresis should be classified as a subtype of SAD because of overlap in symptoms 1,4 and the primarily socially anxious disposition of those with paruresis (eg avoidance strategies, overwhelming fear of negative evaluation). 3,7,8 Nevertheless, paruresis and SAD are likely to be two distinct conditions, as patients with paruresis do not necessarily present with comorbid SAD (approximately 5.1-22.2% of individuals with paruresis also had comorbid SAD). 2 Similarly, parcopresis is likely to be a distinct condition rather than a form of SAD.…”
Section: Associated Psychopathology and Comorbiditymentioning
confidence: 99%
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