| Literature DB >> 24766521 |
Alexandra L Clark1, Melissa M Amick, Catherine Fortier, William P Milberg, Regina E McGlinchey.
Abstract
This study examined the performance of 198 Veteran research participants deployed during Operation Enduring Freedom, Operation Iraqi Freedom, and/or Operation New Dawn (OEF/OIF/OND) on four measures of performance validity: the Medical Symptom Validity Test (MSVT), California Verbal Learning Test: Forced Choice Recognition (FCR), Reliable Digit Span (RDS), and TOVA Symptom Exaggeration Index (SEI). Failure on these performance validity tests (PVTs) ranged from 4% to 9%. The overall base rate of poor performance validity, as measured by failure of the MSVT in conjunction with an embedded PVT (FCR, RDS, SEI), was 5.6%. Regression analyses revealed that poor performance validity predicted cognitive test performance and self-reported psychological symptom severity. Furthermore, a greater prevalence of traumatic brain injury (TBI), Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD), co-morbid TBI/PTSD, and other Axis I diagnoses, was observed among participants with poor effort. Although poor performance validity is relatively uncommon in a research setting, these findings demonstrate that clinicians should be cautious when interpreting psychological symptoms and neuropsychological test performance of Veteran participants who fail effort measures.Entities:
Keywords: Deployment.; Effort testing; Symptom exaggeration; Symptom validity
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24766521 DOI: 10.1080/13854046.2014.904928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Neuropsychol ISSN: 1385-4046 Impact factor: 3.535