Standard psychological tests generally provide a single global score that reflects multidimensional constructs, such as depression and anxiety. This single score, however, integrates a range of item contents, including cognitive/affective, somatic, and behavioral characteristics of these multidimensional constructs. The present study was designed to compare the pattern of item endorsement among chronic pain patients (N = 50), psychiatric inpatients (N = 50), and hospital employees (N = 50) on the SCL‐90‐R (Derogatis, Rickels, & Rock, 1976). Pain patients reported the highest SCL‐90 scale level of Somatization, while the psychiatric inpatients reported the highest level of Anxiety and Depression. Additionally, the within‐scale pattern of item responses on the Anxiety and Depression scales differed among groups. Although psychiatric inpatients endorsed equivalent levels of somatic and cognitive items, the pain patients' reports of psychological distress were limited primarily to somatic signs of anxiety and depression. Thus, the interpretation of pain patients' psychological profiles and subsequent treatment recommendations may be inappropriate if based on normative data obtained from psychiatric and/or normal populations.
The 15 patients with the highest numbers of assaultive incidents over a one year period in a state mental hospital were identified and information collected regarding a variety of clinical and demographic characteristics. The results showed a group of patients who are relatively young, manifest severe symptomatology that is generally unresponsive to treatment, and have now been hospitalized continuously for greater than four years. The patients experienced the onset of symptoms as teenagers in most cases, showed poor psychosocial adjustment beyond childhood, and had positive family histories for mental illness or alcohol abuse. Patients with psychotic disorders predominated and tended to have positive symptoms rated as severe to very severe on the Global Rating Scale for Psychosis. Patients with nonpsychotic or personality disorders always showed a high frequency of self-injurious behavior in addition to their aggressive behavior toward others. A number of patients had a history of head trauma with EEG abnormalities. This information provides a starting point for subsequent studies examining potential distinctions between this subpopulation of patients and others, the motivation and circumstances of such incidents, and the interaction between the behaviors and their effects on those around them.
Clinical and demographic data were collected on 203 state mental hospital patients whose length of stay was greater than one year. They comprised 45% of the average adult census and 37% were less than 35 years old. Males were younger and females more educated and likely to have been married at one time. The majority have diagnoses of schizophrenia or organic mental disorders; a few have personality disorders. Patients were treated with drugs but risk/benefit parameters remain to be defined. Thirty-two percent of patients have had a violent episode during the past six months. The prevalence of neurological abnormalities supports the need for specialized neurological and neuropsychological consultation and medical consultation. Most patients require the level of care provided by a hospital, while 15% are ready for discharge but have no housing available. Intermediate care facilities could provide alternatives for some patients otherwise unable to leave the hospital. The implications raised by these findings are discussed.
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