Forty hemodialysis patients from the Regional Kidney Disease Program (RKDP) Network 7, were assigned to two groups of well and poorly adjusted patients on the basis of ratings of nurse practitioners and patient counselors. The results show that the abbreviated form of the California Personality Inventory (CPI), constructed in the light of significant findings in Adler's previous study, does not meet the standards of validity generalization. The inability to obtain a correlation between the adjustment process and the CPI measurements indicate that we do not confirm Adler's findings. In our study, we show that only one demographic characteristic is significantly correlating with the adjustment process, i.e. married hemodialysis patients probably adjust more successfully than those who are unmarried.
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