2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2014.08.005
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The VAGUS insight into psychosis scale – Self-report and clinician-rated versions

Abstract: The aim of this study was to develop self-report and clinician-rated versions of an insight scale that would be easy to administer, sensitive to small changes, and inclusive of the core dimensions of clinical insight into psychosis. Ten-item self-report (VAGUS-SR) and five-item clinician-rated (VAGUS-CR) scales were designed to measure the dimensions of insight into psychosis and evaluated in 215 and 140 participants, respectively (www.vagusonline.com). Tests of reliability and validity were performed. Both th… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(38 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
(39 reference statements)
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“…IMP-INS was measured at baseline using the clinician-rated Schedule for the Assessment of Insight – Expanded (SAI-E) (David, 1990) and the VAGUS Self-report version (VAGUS-SR) (Gerretsen et al, 2014c). VAGUS-SR was used to measure changes in IMP-INS following CVS due to its temporal sensitivity in comparison with the SAI-E. VAGUS-SR (www.vagusonline.com) is a 10 item self-report measure designed to be easy to administer, sensitive to small changes, and, like the SAI-E, inclusive of the core dimensions of clinical insight into psychosis, i.e.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…IMP-INS was measured at baseline using the clinician-rated Schedule for the Assessment of Insight – Expanded (SAI-E) (David, 1990) and the VAGUS Self-report version (VAGUS-SR) (Gerretsen et al, 2014c). VAGUS-SR was used to measure changes in IMP-INS following CVS due to its temporal sensitivity in comparison with the SAI-E. VAGUS-SR (www.vagusonline.com) is a 10 item self-report measure designed to be easy to administer, sensitive to small changes, and, like the SAI-E, inclusive of the core dimensions of clinical insight into psychosis, i.e.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…VAGUS-SR was used to measure changes in IMP-INS following CVS due to its temporal sensitivity in comparison with the SAI-E. VAGUS-SR (www.vagusonline.com) is a 10 item self-report measure designed to be easy to administer, sensitive to small changes, and, like the SAI-E, inclusive of the core dimensions of clinical insight into psychosis, i.e. (i) Illness awareness or acceptance, (ii) symptom awareness and accurate symptom attribution, (iii) awareness of need for treatment, and (iv) awareness of negative consequences of the illness (Gerretsen et al, 2014c). Lower scores on both SAI-E and VAGUS-SR represent greater impairment of insight into illness.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several self-report questionnaires have been developed for use in psychotic disorders (IS; Birchwood et al, 1994;VAGUS;Gerretsen et al, 2014;Markova and Berrios, 1992;Markova et al, 2003), BD (Wong et al, 1999), and to measure insight in psychotherapy (IOS; Gori et al, 2015). It is, however, of interest to investigate insight transdiagnostically; i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The following assessments were also performed: the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) [15], Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) [16], VAGUS [17] for insight into illness, Medi-cation Possession Ratios (MPRs) [18], the Japanese version of the Drug Attitude Inventory-10 (DAI-10) [19,20], and the Japanese version of the Morisky Simplified Self-Report Measure of Adherence [21,22]. MPR is defined as total days a medication was actually dispensed to patients divided by treatment days.…”
Section: Cross-sectional Assessmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%