A particularly controversial aspect in the field of personality assessment is the use of self-report measures, versus clinicians’ evaluations, for diagnosing personality disorder (PD). No studies have systematically documented the agreement between these sources for the entire array of DSM-5 PDs using comprehensive measures and experienced clinicians’ judgments. The present work fills this gap by indexing the agreement between patients’ self-descriptions and clinicians’ judgments, relying on standardized and thorough PD instruments. The Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedure-200 (SWAP-200; Westen and Shedler, 1999a, 1999b) and the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-III (Millon, Davis, and Millon, 1997) were both completed in a clinical series of 56 adult outpatients. Analyses highlighted moderate correlations between the two measures for the 10 DSM-5 PDs (Mdn =.35). Agreement was highest for psychological features that are more easily observable by the clinicians. Furthermore, results revealed problematic discriminant validity between the two instruments.
Gritti, E., Samuel, D., Lang, M. (2016). Diagnostic agreement between clinicians and clients: The convergent and discriminant validity of the swap-200 and MCMI-III personality disorder scales. JOURNAL OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS, 30(6), 796-812 [10.1521/pedi_2015_29_231].
Diagnostic agreement between clinicians and clients: The convergent and discriminant validity of the swap-200 and MCMI-III personality disorder scales
GRITTI, EMANUELA SAVERIA VALENTINA
;LANG, MARGHERITA
2016
Abstract
A particularly controversial aspect in the field of personality assessment is the use of self-report measures, versus clinicians’ evaluations, for diagnosing personality disorder (PD). No studies have systematically documented the agreement between these sources for the entire array of DSM-5 PDs using comprehensive measures and experienced clinicians’ judgments. The present work fills this gap by indexing the agreement between patients’ self-descriptions and clinicians’ judgments, relying on standardized and thorough PD instruments. The Shedler-Westen Assessment Procedure-200 (SWAP-200; Westen and Shedler, 1999a, 1999b) and the Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory-III (Millon, Davis, and Millon, 1997) were both completed in a clinical series of 56 adult outpatients. Analyses highlighted moderate correlations between the two measures for the 10 DSM-5 PDs (Mdn =.35). Agreement was highest for psychological features that are more easily observable by the clinicians. Furthermore, results revealed problematic discriminant validity between the two instruments.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.