1994
DOI: 10.3109/01674829409025643
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Symptom perception: psychological correlates of symptom reporting and illness behavior of women with medically unexplained gynecological symptoms

Abstract: Medically unexplained (gynecological) symptoms can be viewed as an indication of the somatization of negative emotions. Most studies regarding psychological correlates of medically unexplained gynecological symptoms have paid attention only to certain personality characteristics of women with these symptoms. In this study the reporting of physical symptoms and the resulting illness behavior is explained in terms of information processing or a perception process, i.e. the process by which people detect and inte… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Despite much research on the biological and psychosocial risk factors for somatoform disorders and ‘medically unexplained symptoms', there is little substantive evidence to explain their aetiology 24 . Medically unexplained symptoms may be best understood in terms of the way bodily perceptions are processed; symptom perception is in part determined by environmental, emotional and cognitive characteristics, such as specific cognitive illness schemes 25 . Thus, the choice of symptoms may be influenced by a variety of factors; in the case of the complaint of dysmenorrhoea, social factors and the experiences of female relatives (such as sisters) may be important as a determinant of a cognitive illness scheme.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite much research on the biological and psychosocial risk factors for somatoform disorders and ‘medically unexplained symptoms', there is little substantive evidence to explain their aetiology 24 . Medically unexplained symptoms may be best understood in terms of the way bodily perceptions are processed; symptom perception is in part determined by environmental, emotional and cognitive characteristics, such as specific cognitive illness schemes 25 . Thus, the choice of symptoms may be influenced by a variety of factors; in the case of the complaint of dysmenorrhoea, social factors and the experiences of female relatives (such as sisters) may be important as a determinant of a cognitive illness scheme.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Both these characteristics were also found to be applicable to the complaint of AVD. Medically unexplained symptoms may be explained in terms of the way bodily perceptions are processed; symptom perception is, in part, determined by environmental, emotional, and cognitive characteristics, such as specific cognitive illness schemes [30]. Thus, the choice of symptoms may be Box 4 Narratives of the help-seeking behaviors of women with complaints of AVD "The doctor told my mother that I am getting vaginal discharge because of infection.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reported physical symptoms present psychosocial disorders through somatisation. There is evidence that anxiety and depression can have effect on autonomic nervous system, leading to muscle-tension related pains, and a distressed person is more likely to interpret normal physical experience as pathological [Patel and Oomman (1999); Hunter (1990) andVan Vliet, et al (1994)].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%