Recent studies have demonstrated that individuals with a history of uncued panic attacks exhibit heightened difficulties in emotion regulation, including experiential avoidance, emotional non-acceptance, and lack of emotional clarity. The purpose of this study was to extend these findings by examining whether the fear of bodily sensations predicted the presence of experiential avoidance and emotional non-acceptance and whether body hypervigilance predicted a lack of emotional clarity in a sample of 91 individuals with a recent history (past year) of uncued panic attacks. Findings indicated that the fear of bodily sensations predicts experiential avoidance, emotional non-acceptance, and lack of emotional clarity above and beyond other panic-relevant variables.
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