4.5 Article

Frequency of narcissistic personality disorder in a counseling center population in China

Journal

BMC PSYCHIATRY
Volume 19, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12888-019-2185-5

Keywords

Narcissism; DSM; Diagnosis; Narcissistic personality disorder; China

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of China
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2016YFC1306803, 2016YFC1306805]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81671329, 81671332]
  4. Suzhou Municipal Science and Technology Bureau, China [sys2018097]
  5. Clinical Research Plan of SHDC [16CR2015A, 16CR3016A]
  6. Science and Technology Commission of Shanghai Municipality [19441907800]
  7. Shanghai Jiaotong University Foundation [ZH2018ZDB03]
  8. Shanghai Key Laboratory of Psychotic Disorders [13dz2260500]
  9. Shanghai Mental Health Center Foundation [2016-FX-01, 2017-TSXK-03]
  10. Shanghai Key Basic Research Project [16JC1420201]
  11. Shanghai Mental Health Center by The Clinical Research Center at Shanghai Mental Health Center [CRC2018ZD01, CRC2018ZD04, CRC2018YB01]

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BackgroundNarcissistic personality disorder (NPD) has never been applied in Chinese clinical practice, and the distribution of NPD in the clinical population of China is largely unknown. The current study uses two-stage clinic-based screening to investigate the frequency and clinical features of NPD in a Chinese help-seeking sample.MethodsA total of 1402 consecutive outpatients ages 18-60 were recruited during their visit to the Shanghai Mental Health Center and screened with the Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire Fourth Edition Plus (PDQ-4+) and Structured Clinical Interview for the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV) Axis II (SCID-II). The structured clinical interview was administered to estimate the rate of NPD and the frequency of each disorder criterion.ResultsThe frequency estimate of NPD in the total sample was 4.0%. Among the 56 outpatients who met the criteria for NPD, there were more males than females, and many had a better educational background. The SCID-II interviews revealed high frequencies of diagnostic criterion 1 (exaggerated sense of self-importance. NPD likely overlaps with Histrionic PD, Borderline PD, and Paranoid PD. This two stage screening method can enhance detection of Chinese NPD patients in clinical settings.ConclusionsNarcissism pathology is not rare in the Chinese psychiatric community when using the DSM-IV NPD criteria. Existing evidence suggests, at least indirectly, that there are important benefits of NPD diagnosis in psychiatric practice.

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