Objective: Compulsive buying is controversial in clinical psychiatry. Although it is defined as an obsessive-compulsive disorder, other personality aspects besides compulsivity are related to compulsive buying. Recent studies suggest that compulsivity and impulsivity might represent a continuum, with several psychiatric disorders lying between these two extremes. In this sense, and following the perspective of dimensional psychiatry, symptoms of impulsivity and compulsivity should correlate even in a non-clinical sample. The present study aims to investigate whether these two traits are associated in a healthy adult sample. Methods: We evaluated 100 adults, with no self-reported psychiatric disorders, using the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale-11 and two scales of compulsive buying. Results: Using multiple linear regressions, we found that impulsivity accounted for about 15% of variance in the compulsive-buying measure. Conclusions: Our results suggest that an association between impulsivity and compulsive buying occurs even in non-clinical samples, evidence that compulsivity and impulsivity might form a continuum and that compulsive buying might be an intermediate condition between these two personality traits.
CITATION STYLE
de Paula, J. J., Costa, D. de S., Oliveira, F., Alves, J. O., Passos, L. R., & Malloy-Dini, L. F. (2015). Impulsivity and compulsive buying are associated in a non-clinical sample: An evidence for the compulsivity-impulsivity continuum? Revista Brasileira de Psiquiatria, 37(3), 242–244. https://doi.org/10.1590/1516-4446-2014-1644
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