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Journal Article

Citation

Olssøn I, Svindseth MF, Dahl AA. Nord. J. Psychiatry 2015; 70(2): 121-127.

Affiliation

Ingrid Olssøn, Department of Psychiatry, Innlandet Hospital Trust , Hamar , Norway.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.3109/08039488.2015.1058418

PMID

26212624

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Narcissism is a personality trait associated with both psychological health and resilience as well as with aggression and interpersonal problems.

AIM: This study compares levels of total narcissism and subscale scores in inpatients, outpatients and a community sample.

METHODS: Inpatients (N = 186) were recruited from consecutively admitted patients to two closed units, and the outpatient group (N = 144) consisted of patients attending a psychiatric outpatient clinic. The patients and a normative community sample (N = 437) all filled in the Narcissistic Personality Inventory questionnaire (NPI-29).

RESULTS: The NPI total and subscales scores showed considerable gender differences. Among men only the Uniqueness/Entitlement subscale showed significant group differences, with inpatients showing higher mean score than the two other groups. Among women three factors, Leadership/Power, Superiority/Arrogance, and Uniqueness/ Entitlement, showed significant differences between the different levels of psychopathology. The outpatient female group regularly had the lowest group mean scores. The NPI-29 scores of the normative group showed weak internal consistencies.

CONCLUSION: Our hypothesis of a significant association between mean levels of total narcissism and subscale scores and severity of psychopathology was not supported.


Language: en

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