TY - JOUR
T1 - Buying-shopping disorder - Is there enough evidence to support its inclusion in ICD-11?
AU - Müller, Astrid
AU - Brand, Matthias
AU - Claes, Laurence
AU - Demetrovics, Zsolt
AU - De Zwaan, Martina
AU - Fernández-Aranda, Fernando
AU - Frost, Randy O.
AU - Jimenez-Murcia, Susana
AU - Lejoyeux, Michael
AU - Steins-Loeber, Sabine
AU - Mitchell, James E.
AU - Moulding, Richard
AU - Nedeljkovic, Maja
AU - Trotzke, Patrick
AU - Weinstein, Aviv
AU - Kyrios, Michael
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 Cambridge University Press.
PY - 2019/8/1
Y1 - 2019/8/1
N2 - The phenomenon of buying-shopping disorder (BSD) was described over 100 years ago. Definitions of BSD refer to extreme preoccupation with shopping and buying, to impulses to purchase that are experienced as irresistible, and to recurrent maladaptive buying excesses that lead to distress and impairments. Efforts to stop BSD episodes are unsuccessful, despite the awareness of repeated break-downs in self-regulation, experiences of post-purchase guilt and regret, comorbid psychiatric disorders, reduced quality of life, familial discord, work impairment, financial problems, and other negative consequences. A recent meta-analysis indicated an estimated point prevalence of BSD of 5%. In this narrative review, the authors offer a perspective to consider BSD as a mental health condition and to classify this disorder as a behavioral addiction, based on both research data and on long-standing clinical experience.
AB - The phenomenon of buying-shopping disorder (BSD) was described over 100 years ago. Definitions of BSD refer to extreme preoccupation with shopping and buying, to impulses to purchase that are experienced as irresistible, and to recurrent maladaptive buying excesses that lead to distress and impairments. Efforts to stop BSD episodes are unsuccessful, despite the awareness of repeated break-downs in self-regulation, experiences of post-purchase guilt and regret, comorbid psychiatric disorders, reduced quality of life, familial discord, work impairment, financial problems, and other negative consequences. A recent meta-analysis indicated an estimated point prevalence of BSD of 5%. In this narrative review, the authors offer a perspective to consider BSD as a mental health condition and to classify this disorder as a behavioral addiction, based on both research data and on long-standing clinical experience.
KW - Behavioral addiction
KW - classification
KW - compulsive buying-shopping disorder
KW - hoarding disorder
KW - obsessive-compulsive related disorder
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85056169599&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S1092852918001323
DO - 10.1017/S1092852918001323
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C2 - 30604662
AN - SCOPUS:85056169599
SN - 1092-8529
VL - 24
SP - 374
EP - 379
JO - CNS Spectrums
JF - CNS Spectrums
IS - 4
ER -