AI Article Synopsis

  • Electrical injury (EI) leads to unique cognitive and sensory issues that are not commonly seen in other medical populations, prompting this study to assess how EI patients perform on the MMPI-2-RF personality test.
  • The research included 62 EI patients, with a focus on 46 who showed valid symptom reporting; findings revealed that valid EI patients scored significantly higher on several validity scales, suggesting greater reporting of sensory and cognitive disturbances.
  • It was concluded that the MMPI-2-RF results reflect legitimate EI-related symptoms rather than over-reporting, highlighting the need for neuropsychologists to accurately interpret these patterns to avoid misjudging credible patients.

Article Abstract

Electrical injury (EI) is a distinct subtype of traumatic injury that often results in a unique constellation of cognitive sequelae and unusual sensory experiences due to peripheral nervous system injury that are uncommon in general medical/neurological populations and have been unexplored with the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2-Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF). This study examined performance patterns on MMPI-2-RF validity and substantive scales among 62 EI patients who underwent neuropsychological evaluation, of which 46 demonstrated valid symptom reporting neurocognitive test performance via multiple independent validity indicators and were retained for analysis. Valid EI patients scored significantly higher than the MMPI-2-RF normative sample on several validity scales with the largest effect sizes on F-r (Infrequent Responses), Fs (Infrequent Somatic Responses), FBS-r (Symptom Validity), and RBS (Response Bias), and ≥33% obtaining elevated scores on these scales per standard interpretive criteria. Review of item content on these scales revealed several reflect disturbances in sensation, physical functioning, and/or cognition that are not infrequent in this population. Further, MMPI-2-RF clinical profiles did not reveal generalized distress or noncredible over-reporting. Rather, similar to the MMPI-2, valid EI patients had a specific pattern related to physical/sensory symptoms and reduced positive emotions with elevations on restructured clinical (RC) scale 1 (somatic complaints), somatic/cognitive specific problem scales, and low positive emotions (RC2). Elevations on some MMPI-2-RF validity scale may capture some degree of actual EI sequela that neuropsychologists need to consider to prevent erroneously concluding that a credible EI patient is over-reporting when s/he is reporting bona fide, EI-related symptoms.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13854046.2019.1616114DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mmpi-2-rf validity
12
minnesota multiphasic
8
multiphasic personality
8
personality inventory-2-restructured
8
inventory-2-restructured form
8
form mmpi-2-rf
8
validity substantive
8
substantive scales
8
scales patients
8
electrical injury
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!