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A self-report scale predictive of drug compliance in schizophrenics: reliability and discriminative validity

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 July 2009

Thomas P. Hogan*
Affiliation:
Queen Street Mental Health CentreClarke Institute of Psychiatry, Toronto, Canada
A. G. Awad
Affiliation:
Queen Street Mental Health CentreClarke Institute of Psychiatry, Toronto, Canada
Robin Eastwood
Affiliation:
Queen Street Mental Health CentreClarke Institute of Psychiatry, Toronto, Canada
*
1Address for correspondence: Mr T. P. Hogan, Department of Psychology, Queen Street Mental Health Centre, 1001 Queen Street west. Toronto, Canada, M6J 1H4.

Synopsis

Schizophrenic patients' self-reports of their experience of neuroleptic treatment were used as the basis for the construction of a scale predictive of drug compliance. Reliability analysis of the responses of 150 patients indicated high internal consistency in the 30-item scale, and preliminary validation in the form of discriminant classification accurately assigned 89% of the sample to compliant and non-compliant groupings. Both discriminant and factor analyses suggest that maximum variability in responding is accounted for by items reflecting how the patient feels on medication, rather than what he knows or believes about medication.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1983

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