AI Article Synopsis

  • There is no consensus on how accurately people with schizophrenia can report their own real-life functioning, especially compared to their caregivers.
  • In a study with 618 stable schizophrenia patients, researchers compared self-reports of functioning to caregiver reports across three domains: interpersonal relationships, everyday life skills, and work skills.
  • Findings showed that patients generally rated their functioning higher than caregivers, with 17.6% of patients significantly differing from their caregivers, suggesting that caregivers' evaluations strongly predict these discrepancies, and using self-evaluations can help inform rehabilitation strategies.

Article 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.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7884703PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41537-021-00140-9DOI Listing

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