| Literature DB >> 33589645 |
Paola Rocca1, Claudio Brasso2, Cristiana Montemagni2, Silvio Bellino2, Alessandro Rossi3, Alessandro Bertolino4, Dino Gibertoni5, Eugenio Aguglia6, Mario Amore7, Ileana Andriola4, Antonello Bellomo8, Paola Bucci9, Antonino Buzzanca10, Bernardo Carpiniello11, Alessandro Cuomo12, Liliana Dell'Osso13, Angela Favaro14, Giulia Maria Giordano9, Carlo Marchesi15, Palmiero Monteleone16, Lucio Oldani17, Maurizio Pompili18, Rita Roncone19, Rodolfo Rossi3, Alberto Siracusano20, Antonio Vita21,22, Patrizia Zeppegno23, Silvana Galderisi9, Mario Maj9.
Abstract
A consensus has not yet been reached regarding the accuracy of people with schizophrenia in self-reporting their real-life functioning. In a large (n = 618) cohort of stable, community-dwelling schizophrenia patients we sought to: (1) examine the concordance of patients' reports of their real-life functioning with the reports of their key caregiver; (2) identify which patient characteristics are associated to the differences between patients and informants. Patient-caregiver concordance of the ratings in three Specific Level of Functioning Scale (SLOF) domains (interpersonal relationships, everyday life skills, work skills) was evaluated with matched-pair t tests, the Lin's concordance correlation, Somers' D, and Bland-Altman plots with limits of agreement (LOA). Predictors of the patient-caregiver differences in SLOF ratings were assessed with a linear regression with multivariable fractional polynomials. Patients' self-evaluation of functioning was higher than caregivers' in all the evaluated domains of the SLOF and 17.6% of the patients exceeded the LOA, thus providing a self-evaluation discordant from their key caregivers. The strongest predictors of patient-caregiver discrepancies were caregivers' ratings in each SLOF domain. In clinically stable outpatients with a moderate degree of functional impairment, self-evaluation with the SLOF scale can become a useful, informative and reliable clinical tool to design a tailored rehabilitation program.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33589645 DOI: 10.1038/s41537-021-00140-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Schizophr ISSN: 2334-265X