Objective: This study explored the nature of interpersonal problems in IBS patients using the interpersonal circumplex as an organizing framework. Based on conceptualizations of interpersonal behavior of IBS patients, we predicted that their interpersonal problems would peak in the friendly submissive regions of the circumplex.

Method: Fifty-nine healthy controls and 174 IBS patients completed the Inventory of Interpersonal Problems (IIP) and Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI).

Results: The interpersonal profile of IBS patients was characterized by difficulties with assertiveness and, to a lesser extent, social inhibition. Gender-controlled analyses did not attenuate between group differences on nonassertiveness and, in some cases, sharpened them. Patients with diarrhea-predominant subtype or longer symptom duration had more pronounced interpersonal problems than did their respective counterparts.

Conclusion: The main finding that IBS patients have a distinctive interpersonal style characterized by aspects of submissiveness speaks to the potential value of the circumplex for increasing our understanding of IBS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychores.2005.02.015DOI Listing

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