Empirical Derivation of a New MMPI-2 Scale for Identifying Probable Malingering in Personal Injury Litigants and Disability Claimants: The 15-Item Malingered Mood Disorder Scale (MMDS) |
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Authors: | George K. Henry Robert L. Heilbronner Wiley Mittenberg Craig Enders Darci M. Roberts |
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Affiliation: | 1. Los Angeles Neuropsychology Group , Los Angeles, CAGHenry0249@aol.com;3. Chicago Neuropsychology Group , Forensic Neuropsychology Institute , Chicago, IL;4. Nova Southeastern University , Ft. Lauderdale, FL;5. Arizona State University , Tempe, AZ, USA |
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Abstract: | A new 15-item MMPI-2 subscale, the Malingered Mood Disorder Scale (MMDS), was empirically derived from the original 32-item Malingered Depression Scale (MDS) of Steffan, Clopton, and Morgan (2003 Steffan , J. S. , Clopton , J. R. , & Morgan , R. D. ( 2003 ). An MMPI-2 scale to detect malingered depression (Md Scale) Assessment , 10 ( 4 ), 382 – 392 . [Google Scholar]). The MMDS was superior to the original MDS in identification of symptom exaggeration in personal injury litigants and disability claimants compared to non-litigating head-injured controls. Logistic regression revealed that a cut score of ≥ 7 on the MMDS produced good specificity (93.4%) with an associated sensitivity of 54.8%. An MMDS score of ≥ 8 was associated with 100% positive predictive power, i.e., no false positive errors. These results suggest that the MMDS may be useful in identifying personal injury litigants and disability claimants who exaggerate emotional disturbance on the MMPI-2. |
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Keywords: | Malingered mood disorder Probable malingering Symptom validity |
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