Assessing emotional distress at the internist's office |
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Authors: | T L Rosenthal S T Miller R H Rosenthal W R Shadish B S Fogleman S E Dismuke |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychiatry, University of Tennessee, Memphis 38105. |
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Abstract: | At their first visits to a clinic, 102 outpatients rated the severity of their presenting complaint, of 12 possible body problems including 6 nonspecific symptoms, of a set of adjustment difficulties, and answered the Welsh A and the Beck Depression inventories. Then, an internist 'blind' to the foregoing answers performed a routine history and physical exam, afterward rating the patient for degree of organic and of psychosomatic involvement. Significant correlations were found between clinician judgments of psychosomatic involvement and patients' self-reported complaints on all assessment measures (smallest r = 0.25, P less than 0.01). Substantial intercorrelations were found among the assessment measures, especially between Welsh A (Anxiety) and Beck Depression scores (r = 0.73). |
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