OBJECTIVE: Diagnosis-specific, proven efficacious treatments are a major recent advance in psychiatry. Appropriate use of such treatments presupposes patients who meet the diagnostic criteria and clinicians who have accurately diagnosed the target disorder and comorbid conditions. Since little is known about whether these prerequisites are commonly met, the authors conducted a study at two community treatment sites to determine the frequency of various axis I diagnoses and the concordance between the diagnoses recorded in patient charts and those obtained by a structured interview. Given that a DSM diagnosis may not be sufficient to understand a patient's problems, the authors also obtained ratings of interpersonal functioning. METHOD: The subjects were 164 nonpsychotic patients who were seen at a rural (N=114) or urban (N=50) community treatment facility. Raters trained to reliably use the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID) conducted diagnostic interviews. Clinical charts were reviewed to obtain clinical diagnoses. Patients completed questionnaires regarding interpersonal functioning. RESULTS: Most (N=145, 88%) of the patients met the SCID criteria for a current axis I diagnosis, and 53% (N=87) met the criteria for two or more disorders. Clinical and SCID diagnoses had poor agreement. Evidence was found for interpersonal dysfunction. CONCLUSIONS: Most patients met the diagnostic criteria for conditions for which there are proven treatments; however, inaccurate diagnosis proved common. This barrier to optimal treatment could be ameliorated with the use of structured interviews for common diagnoses. Scores on social/interpersonal measures support the premise that DSM symptoms provide only part of the relevant information about patients' conditions.
OBJECTIVE: Diagnosis-specific, proven efficacious treatments are a major recent advance in psychiatry. Appropriate use of such treatments presupposes patients who meet the diagnostic criteria and clinicians who have accurately diagnosed the target disorder and comorbid conditions. Since little is known about whether these prerequisites are commonly met, the authors conducted a study at two community treatment sites to determine the frequency of various axis I diagnoses and the concordance between the diagnoses recorded in patient charts and those obtained by a structured interview. Given that a DSM diagnosis may not be sufficient to understand a patient's problems, the authors also obtained ratings of interpersonal functioning. METHOD: The subjects were 164 nonpsychoticpatients who were seen at a rural (N=114) or urban (N=50) community treatment facility. Raters trained to reliably use the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID) conducted diagnostic interviews. Clinical charts were reviewed to obtain clinical diagnoses. Patients completed questionnaires regarding interpersonal functioning. RESULTS: Most (N=145, 88%) of the patients met the SCID criteria for a current axis I diagnosis, and 53% (N=87) met the criteria for two or more disorders. Clinical and SCID diagnoses had poor agreement. Evidence was found for interpersonal dysfunction. CONCLUSIONS: Most patients met the diagnostic criteria for conditions for which there are proven treatments; however, inaccurate diagnosis proved common. This barrier to optimal treatment could be ameliorated with the use of structured interviews for common diagnoses. Scores on social/interpersonal measures support the premise that DSM symptoms provide only part of the relevant information about patients' conditions.
Authors: Lisa J Colpe; Peggy R Barker; Rhonda S Karg; Kathy R Batts; Katherine B Morton; Joseph C Gfroerer; Stephanie J Stolzenberg; David B Cunningham; Michael B First; Jeremy Aldworth Journal: Int J Methods Psychiatr Res Date: 2010-06 Impact factor: 4.035
Authors: Claude M Chemtob; Omar G Gudiño; Rohini Luthra; Rachel Yehuda; James Schmeidler; Brian Auslander; Hillel Hirshbein; Alan Schoor; Rick Greenberg; Jeffrey Newcorn; Paula G Panzer; Todd Schenk; Paul Levine; Robert Abramovitz Journal: Evid Based Pract Child Adolesc Ment Health Date: 2016-08-26
Authors: Jennifer A Linde; Gregory E Simon; Evette J Ludman; Laura E Ichikawa; Belinda H Operskalski; David Arterburn; Paul Rohde; Emily A Finch; Robert W Jeffery Journal: Ann Behav Med Date: 2011-02
Authors: Mary E Bongiovi-Garcia; Jessica Merville; M Goretti Almeida; Ainsley Burke; Steven Ellis; Barbara H Stanley; Kelly Posner; J John Mann; Maria A Oquendo Journal: J Affect Disord Date: 2008-09-23 Impact factor: 4.839