BACKGROUND The present study aimed to explore the phenomenology, associated impairment, and clinical correlates of olfactory reference syndrome (ORS) symptoms in a Chinese university student sample, and establish estimated ORS… Click to show full abstract
BACKGROUND The present study aimed to explore the phenomenology, associated impairment, and clinical correlates of olfactory reference syndrome (ORS) symptoms in a Chinese university student sample, and establish estimated ORS prevalence. METHODS A total of 421 undergraduate students completed self-report measures assessing symptoms of ORS, obsessive-compulsive disorder, depression, anxiety, stress, taijin kyofushu, fear of negative evaluation, and ORS-related functional impairment. RESULTS Higher ORS symptom severity was moderately associated with poorer insight, greater avoidance, and higher ORS-related functional impairment. ORS severity was weakly associated with increased comorbid disorder symptoms, and was not associated with gender. Clinically significant ORS symptoms were present in 2.4% of the sample. DISCUSSION Collectively, these findings suggest that ORS symptoms are relatively distinct from other disorders in a non-clinical sample. Future studies are encouraged to further explore the phenomenology, etiology, neurobiology, and treatment of ORS in order to inform diagnosis and nosology.
               
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