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- Title
Cognitive behavioral therapy for compulsive buying behavior: Predictors of treatment outcome.
- Authors
Granero, R.; Fernández-Aranda, F.; Mestre-Bach, G.; Steward, T.; Baño, M.; Agüera, Z.; Mallorquí-Bagué, N.; Aymamí, N.; Gómez-Peña, M.; Sancho, M.; Sánchez, I.; Menchón, J.M.; Martín-Romera, V.; Jiménez-Murcia, S.
- Abstract
Background Compulsive buying behavior (CBB) is receiving increasing consideration in both consumer and psychiatric-epidemiological research, yet empirical evidence on treatment interventions is scarce and mostly from small homogeneous clinical samples. Objectives To estimate the short-term effectiveness of a standardized, individual cognitive behavioral therapy intervention (CBT) in a sample of n = 97 treatment-seeking patients diagnosed with CBB, and to identify the most relevant predictors of therapy outcome. Method The intervention consisted of 12 individual CBT weekly sessions, lasting approximately 45 minutes each. Data on patients’ personality traits, psychopathology, sociodemographic factors, and compulsive buying behavior were used in our analysis. Results The risk (cumulative incidence) of poor adherence to the CBT program was 27.8%. The presence of relapses during the CBT program was 47.4% and the dropout rate was 46.4%. Significant predictors of poor therapy adherence were being male, high levels of depression and obsessive-compulsive symptoms, low anxiety levels, high persistence, high harm avoidance and low self-transcendence. Conclusion Cognitive behavioral models show promise in treating CBB, however future interventions for CBB should be designed via a multidimensional approach in which patients’ sex, comorbid symptom levels and the personality-trait profiles play a central role.
- Subjects
COMPULSIVE shopping; COGNITIVE therapy; PATHOLOGICAL psychology; AVOIDANCE (Psychology); PSYCHIATRIC research; EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Publication
European Psychiatry, 2017, Vol 39, p57
- ISSN
0924-9338
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1016/j.eurpsy.2016.06.004