Does insecure attachment mediate the relationship between trauma and voice-hearing in psychosis?

M. Pilton, S. Bucci, J. McManus, M. Hayward, R. Emsley, K. Berry

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This study extends existing research and theoretical developments by exploring the potential mediating role of insecure attachment within the relationship between trauma and voice-hearing. Fifty-five voice hearers with a psychosis-related diagnosis completed comprehensive assessments of childhood trauma, adult attachment, voice-related severity and distress, beliefs about voices and relationships with voices. Anxious attachment was significantly associated with the voice-hearing dimensions examined. More sophisticated analysis showed that anxious attachment mediated the relationship between childhood sexual and emotional abuse and voice-related severity and distress, voice-malevolence, voice-omnipotence, voice-resistance and hearer-dependence. Anxious attachment also mediated the relationship between childhood physical neglect and voice-related severity and distress and hearer-dependence. Furthermore, consistent with previous research, the relationship between anxious attachment and voice-related distress was mediated by voice-malevolence, voice-omnipotence and voice-resistance. We propose a model whereby anxious attachment mediates the well-established relationship between trauma and voice-hearing. In turn, negative beliefs about voices may mediate the association between anxious attachment and voice-related distress. Findings presented here highlight the need to assess and formulate the impact of attachment patterns upon the voice-hearing experience in psychosis and the potential to alleviate voice-related distress by fostering secure attachments to therapists or significant others.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)776-782
Number of pages7
JournalPsychiatry Research
Volume246
Early online date26 Oct 2016
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Dec 2016

Keywords

  • Attachment theory
  • Auditory hallucinations
  • Interpersonal theory
  • Voices

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