Burdening guilt refers to the belief that one’s emotions, needs, and ways of being are a burden to others, and is one type of interpersonal guilt proposed by the control-mastery theory (CMT). The aim of this article is to validate two new measures of burdening guilt. In the two studies conducted, we examined the psychometric properties of these scales and the relationship between burdening guilt and self-perceived burden (burdensomeness), self-esteem, shame, anxiety, depression, mental health, attachment insecurity, adverse childhood experiences, social desirability, empathy, and suicidal ideation. In Study 1, we presented a newly developed Burdening Guilt Rating Scale (BGRS) and its correlation with measures of the above mentioned dimensions. In Study 2 we verified, through confirmatory factor analysis and correlation techniques, the possibility of expanding the Interpersonal Guilt Rating Scale-15 with a shorter, 5-item burdening guilt scale derived from the BGRS, and showed that this shorter scale correlates similarly to the longer one. Findings allowed us to validate these new scales providing empirical measures of burdening guilt—a theoretical concept with important clinical implications.

Assessing Burdening Guilt and Its Correlates / Leonardi, Jessica; Gazzillo, Francesco; Gorman, Bernard; Bush, Marshall. - In: PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHIATRY. - ISSN 2162-2590. - (2023).

Assessing Burdening Guilt and Its Correlates

Jessica Leonardi
Primo
;
Francesco Gazzillo
Secondo
;
2023

Abstract

Burdening guilt refers to the belief that one’s emotions, needs, and ways of being are a burden to others, and is one type of interpersonal guilt proposed by the control-mastery theory (CMT). The aim of this article is to validate two new measures of burdening guilt. In the two studies conducted, we examined the psychometric properties of these scales and the relationship between burdening guilt and self-perceived burden (burdensomeness), self-esteem, shame, anxiety, depression, mental health, attachment insecurity, adverse childhood experiences, social desirability, empathy, and suicidal ideation. In Study 1, we presented a newly developed Burdening Guilt Rating Scale (BGRS) and its correlation with measures of the above mentioned dimensions. In Study 2 we verified, through confirmatory factor analysis and correlation techniques, the possibility of expanding the Interpersonal Guilt Rating Scale-15 with a shorter, 5-item burdening guilt scale derived from the BGRS, and showed that this shorter scale correlates similarly to the longer one. Findings allowed us to validate these new scales providing empirical measures of burdening guilt—a theoretical concept with important clinical implications.
2023
control-mastery theory, Interpersonal Guilt Rating Scale-20, interpersonal guilt, burdening guilt, Burdening Guilt Rating Scale, self-report scales
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Assessing Burdening Guilt and Its Correlates / Leonardi, Jessica; Gazzillo, Francesco; Gorman, Bernard; Bush, Marshall. - In: PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHIATRY. - ISSN 2162-2590. - (2023).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1693422
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