Title of article :
Consensus judgments of discharge readiness based on paranoid
behavior: to what are clinical staff responding
Author/Authors :
Julian A. Salinas، نويسنده , , Gordon L. Paul، نويسنده , , Justin R. Springer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Background Salinas et al. (J Consult
Clin Psychol 4:1029–1039, 2002) found that, contrary
to widely held beliefs, paranoid behavior was a positive
prognostic indicator for psychiatric inpatients
only due to artifactual restrictions on overall level of
functioning that result from traditional classification
procedures. Paranoid functioning, in fact, negatively
impacted consensus staff discharge-readiness judgments.
This discrepancy between clinical lore and
empirical findings raises a question about the aspects
of paranoid functioning to which staff responds.
Method Those aspects of paranoid functioning are
examined in this study, using the same sample of 469
inpatients from 19 treatment units reported in the
Salinas et al. investigation. Results Both dimensionally
measured paranoid functioning and overall level
of disability were independently associated with
negative discharge-readiness decisions. However, rather
than delusions or hallucinations, hostility entirely
accounted for the contribution of paranoid
functioning to these prognostic judgments. Conclusion
We discuss implications of an alternative approach
to classifying patients’ problem behavior for
clinical research and practice.
Keywords :
paranoid behavior – hostility – discharge-readiness – dimensional classification
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)
Journal title :
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology (SPPE)