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Articles

Childhood emotional neglect and depressive and anxiety symptoms among mental health outpatients: the mediating roles of narcissistic vulnerability and shame

ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 24-32 | Received 30 Apr 2020, Accepted 08 Sep 2020, Published online: 21 Oct 2020
 

Abstract

Background

Theorized to stem from experiences of childhood emotional neglect, narcissistic vulnerability has been identified as contributing to expressions of psychiatric distress such as depressive and anxiety symptoms, particularly due to shame-proneness.

Aims

To investigate narcissistic vulnerability and shame as mediators between perceived childhood emotional neglect and depressive and generalized anxiety symptoms among psychiatric outpatients.

Methods

Adults (N = 137) attending community mental health services completed self-report measures at intake. Mediation analyses tested the indirect effect of perceived emotional neglect on depressive and generalized anxiety symptom severity through narcissistic vulnerability; shame was added to subsequent models to examine narcissistic vulnerability and shame as sequential mediators.

Results

Perceived emotional neglect was significantly associated with narcissistic vulnerability, which in turn was linked with depressive and generalized anxiety symptoms as separate dependent variables. Indirect effects were significant in each model, indicating narcissistic vulnerability as a significant mediator. With the inclusion of shame, narcissistic vulnerability and shame were significant as sequential mediators.

Conclusion

Narcissistic vulnerability and shame may operate as mechanisms in conferring affective symptom severity from perceived childhood emotional neglect. Narcissistic vulnerability and susceptibility to shame may thus be important treatment targets when addressing psychological distress in the context of childhood adversity.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 To check for shared variance we conducted a principal components analysis which indicated that our independent and dependent variable items loaded on separate factors from mediator variables.

Additional information

Funding

Preparation of this manuscript was supported by a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Scholar Award, #18317, awarded to Dr. David Kealy.

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