| Literature DB >> 30487818 |
Eduardo Osuna1, Milagros López-Martínez2, Ramón Arce3, María José Vázquez4.
Abstract
In order to assess mental health status, and the classification of both the overreporting and underreporting scales and indexes, 102 psychiatric prison inmates deemed mentally incompetent to stand trial completed the Spanish adaptation of the MMPI-2 under standard instructions (honest responding). The results showed patterns of consistent, non-random, nor extremely acquiescent responses. Moreover, no-outlier responses were detected. In line with the psychiatric diagnosis, all the psychiatric prison inmates were classified by the basic clinical scales as clinical cases of the psychotic dyad i.e., schizophrenia and paranoid ideation. The overreporting scales and indexes (i.e., F, K, Fb, F-K, Fp, Ds and FBS) classified the participants as malingerers, whereas the L, Wsd, and Od underreporting scales as good feigners. These scales assessing impression management i.e., consciously faking good biased responses, did not classify overreporters. Thus, they are robust indicators of honest responding among psychiatric prison inmates. The implications of these results for the practice of forensic psychology are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Ex post facto study; MMPI-2; Malingering; Psychiatric prison inmates; Underreporting
Year: 2014 PMID: 30487818 PMCID: PMC6224864 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijchp.2014.09.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Clin Health Psychol ISSN: 1697-2600
Measures, confidence interval for the mean, region of normality, and comparison of measures.
| Index | RfN | test-value | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| VRIN | 7.75(7.00–8.46) | 0 < | -14.23*** | -1.40 | 13 |
| TRIN | 9.52(9.15–9.89) | 6 < | -18.52*** | -1.82 | 13 |
| |F-Fb| | 22.69(20.04–25.34) | 0 < | 9.38*** | 0.93 | 8 |
| L | 7.77(7.30–8.24) | 1 < | -5.16*** | -0.51 | 9 |
| K+ | 12.90(11.98–13.82) | 7< | -23.31*** | -2.31 | 24 |
| K++ | 12.40*** | 1.23 | 7 | ||
| F | 46.30(44.97–47.63) | 0 < | 40.02*** | 3.96 | 19 |
| Fb | 23.62(21.33–25.91) | 0 < | 5.65*** | 0.56 | 17 |
| F-K+ | 33.40(31.34–35.46) | -23 > | 53.42*** | 5.29 | -23 |
| F-K++ | 22.16*** | 2.20 | 10 | ||
| Fp | 20.49(19.47–21.51) | 0 < | 29.85*** | 2.95 | 5 |
| Ds | 38.66(19.47–21.51) | 2 < | 8.13*** | 0.80 | 30 |
| FBS | 27.11(26.01–28.21) | 8 < | -7.01*** | -0.69 | 31 |
| S | 20.99(19.15–22.83) | 10 < | -24.61*** | -2.44 | 44 |
| Wsd | 14.59(13.59–15.59) | 6 < | -8.60*** | -0.85 | 19 |
| So | 12.62(11.44–13.80) | 7 < | -39.10*** | -3.87 | 36 |
| Od | 14.90(13.94–15.86) | 5 < | -14.46*** | -1.43 | 22 |
Note. df(100); M = mean; 95%CI = 95% confidence interval; RfN = Region for normality i.e., 90% of the distribution (two-tailed: 5% lower and 5% upper); criteria for the RfN taken from clinical setting of Caldwell and Greene (Greene, 2008, Greene, 2011), and for TRIN and VRIN, as both are universal for the normative population (Butcher et al., 1989, Butcher et al., 2001); d = Cohen's d.
*p < .05; **p < .001.
test-value from MMPI-2 Manual (Butcher et al., 1989, Butcher et al., 2001);
test-value = 95th percentile for clinical setting (Greene, 2008);
test-value = 95th percentile for clinical setting (Greene, 2011); +test-value for underreporting; ++ test-value for overreporting.
Classification rates of the item endorsement consistency indexes.
| Psychiatric prison inmates | Non-psychiatric prison inmates | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Index | Cut Score | ||||||
| TRIN | ≥r13 | 4(.039)+ | 1.36 | – | 0(0)+ | – | – |
| VRIN | ≥r13 | 0(0) | – | – | 1(.01) | – | – |
| |F-Fb| | ≥r10 | 88(.863) | 60.21 | 43.15 | 3(.03) | 0.71 | – |
Note.
From Butcher et al., 1989, Butcher et al., 2001;
98th percentile for clinical settings (Greene, 2008); – indicate that the ORs were not calculated as the prevalence of observed cases was not statistically significant; +TRIN raw scores ≤5 were also indicative of inconsistency (indiscriminate tendency to false response), registering the same rate of cases as was expected (.02) for psychiatric prison inmates, and none for non-psychiatric prison inmates;
p < .001; f(p) = frequency(proportion); Z = Z-test; OR = odds ratio.
Classification rate of overreporting markers in psychiatric and non-psychiatric prison inmates.
| Psychiatric prison inmates | Non-psychiatric prison inmates | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Index | Cut Score | ||||||
| F | ≥r25 | 102(1) | 70.00 | 50.00 | 2(.020) | 0 | – |
| K | ≤r5 | 7(.068) | 3.43 | 3.40 | 2(.020) | 0 | – |
| Fb | ≥r21 | 60(.588) | 40.57 | 29.40 | 2(.020) | 0 | – |
| F-K | ≥r17 | 94(.920) | 64.29 | 46.00 | 0(0) | 0 | – |
| Fp | ≥r7 | 97(.951) | 66.50 | 47.55 | 3(.030) | 0.71 | – |
| Ds | ≥r35 | 73(.716) | 52.93 | 35.80 | 10(.100) | 5.71 | 5.00 |
| FBS | ≥r34 | 10(.098) | 5.57 | 4.90 | 0(0) | – | – |
Note.
98th percentile for clinical setting from Caldwell (Greene, 2008); test-value for Z-test and Ors = .02 (T70).
p < .001.
Accumulative analysis of the number of overreporting markers per sample.
| No. of indexes | % | cumulative% | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | 6 | 5.9 | 5.9 |
| 3 | 13 | 12.7 | 18.6 |
| 4 | 30 | 29.4 | 48.0 |
| 5 | 46 | 45.1 | 93.1 |
| 6 | 7 | 6.9 | 100 |
| 0 | 88 | 88 | 88 |
| 1 | 11 | 11 | 99 |
| 2 | 1 | 1 | 100 |
Classification rate of underreporting markers in psychiatric and non-psychiatric prison inmates.
| Psychiatric prison inmates | Non-psychiatric prison inmates | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Index | Cut score | ||||||
| L | ≥r7 | 73(.716) | 30.27*** | 14.32 | 70(.700) | 29.55*** | 14.0 |
| K | ≥r22 | 3(.029) | – | – | 10(.100) | 2.27* | 2.00 |
| F-K | ≤r-.21 | 0(0) | – | – | 1(.010) | – | – |
| S | ≥r39 | 3(.029) | – | – | 7(.070) | 0.90 | – |
| Wsd | ≥r18 | 77(.755) | 32.04*** | 15.10 | 55(.550) | 22.73*** | 11.00 |
| So | ≥r36 | 0(0) | – | – | 0(0) | – | – |
| Od | ≥r19 | 22(.318) | 12.18*** | 6.16 | 51(.510) | 20.91*** | 10.20 |
Note.
From Butcher et al., 1989, Butcher et al., 2001;
From Greene for clinical setting (2011); the test value (H0) for Z, as underreporting was not suspected, was .05, tailed in the direction of the target of the indicator; – value was not computed because the number of cases observed was ≤.05 (H0).
*p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001.
Accumulative analysis of the number of underreporting markers per population.
| No. of indexes | % | cumulative % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | 22 | 21.6 | 21.6 |
| 1 | 49 | 48.0 | 69.6 |
| 2 | 17 | 16.7 | 86.3 |
| 3 | 14 | 13.7 | 100 |
| 0 | 17 | 17 | 17 |
| 1 | 24 | 24 | 41 |
| 2 | 19 | 19 | 60 |
| 3 | 32 | 32 | 92 |
| 4 | 5 | 5 | 97 |
| 5 | 3 | 3 | 100 |
One-sample t-test.
| Scale | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypochondriasis | 13.88 | 83.31 | 9.69 | 1.37 |
| Depression | 0.29 | 70.27 | 9.69 | 0.03 |
| Hysteria | 6.73 | 76.67 | 10.01 | 0.66 |
| Psychopathic deviate | -4.28 | 66.23 | 8.91 | -0.42 |
| Paranoia | 13.98 | 88.82 | 13.59 | 1.38 |
| Psychasthenia | 4.45 | 74.02 | 9.12 | 0.44 |
| Schizophrenia | 25.24 | 96.56 | 10.63 | 2.50 |
| Hypomania | -2.64 | 66.67 | 12.73 | 0.27 |
| Social introversion | -8.50 | 59.68 | 12.27 | 0.84 |
Note. df(101); test-value: T = 70.
p < .01; ***p < .001.
Comparison of the prevalence of clinical cases in psychiatric prison inmates with the probability expected for the normative population.
| Scale | Po | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Hypochondriasis | .922 | 64.9 | 46.1 |
| Depression | .578 | 41.6 | 28.9 |
| Hysteria | .804 | 56.4 | 40.2 |
| Psychopathic deviate | .304 | 20.4 | 15.2 |
| Paranoia | .902 | 63.5 | 45.1 |
| Psychasthenia | .735 | 51.4 | 36.8 |
| Schizophrenia | .1 | 70.5 | 50.0 |
| Hypomania | .402 | 27.5 | 20.1 |
| Social introversion | .284 | 19.0 | 14.2 |
Note. N = 102. Po= Proportion of pathology observed in the psychiatric prison inmates; test-value = .02 (T70).
p < .001.