Whilst a growing body of research has examined dissociation and other psychiatric
symptoms in severe dissociative disorders (DDs), there has been no systematic examination of shame
and sense of self in relationships in DDs. Chronic child abuse often associated with severe DDs, like
dissociative identity disorder, is likely to heighten shame and relationship concerns. This study
investigated complex posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), borderline and Schneiderian symptoms,
dissociation, shame, child abuse, and various markers of self in relationships (e.g., relationship esteem,
relationship depression, fear of relationships).
Methods: Participants were assessed via clinical interview with psychometrically sound questionnaires.
They fell into three diagnostic groups, dissociative disorder (n¼39; primarily dissociative identity
disorder), chronic PTSD (Chr-PTSD; n¼13) or mixed psychiatric presentations (MP; n¼21; primarily
mood and anxiety disorders). All participants had a history of child abuse and/or neglect, and the groups
did not differ on age and gender.
Results: The DD group was higher on nearly all measured variables than the MP group, and had more
severe dissociative, borderline and Schneiderian symptoms than the Chr-PTSD sample. Shame and
complex PTSD symptoms fell marginally short of predicting reductions in relationship esteem,
pathological dissociative symptoms predicted increased relationship depression, and complex PTSD
symptoms predicted fear of relationships.
Limitations: The representativeness of the samples was unknown.
Conclusion: Severe psychiatric symptoms differentiate DDs from chronic PTSD, while dissociation and
shame have a meaningful impact on specific markers of relationship functioning in psychiatric patients
with a history of child abuse and neglect