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Subjective versus interviewer assessment of global quality of life among persons with schizophrenia living in the community: A Nordic multicentre study
Authors:Anita?Bengtsson-Tops  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:anita.bengtsson_tops@ivosa.vxu.se"   title="  anita.bengtsson_tops@ivosa.vxu.se"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Lars?Hansson,Mikael?Sandlund,Olafur?Bjarnason,Jyrki?Korkeila,Lars?Merinder,Liselotte?Nilsson,Knut?Wollo?S?rgaard,Hanne?R.?Vinding,Thomas?Middelboe
Affiliation:(1) Department of Health Sciences and Social work, University of Växjö, SE, 351 95 Växjö, Sweden;(2) Department of Nursing, Lund University, Lund;(3) Department of Clinical Science, Division of Psychiatry, Umeå University, Umeü, Sweden;(4) Department of Psychiatry, Landspitallin, Reykjavik, Iceland;(5) Department of Psychiatry, Turku University, Finland;(6) Community Mental Health Center, Møntmestervej, Copenhagen, Denmark;(7) Department of Psychiatry, Sector Northeast, Malmö, Sweden;(8) Nordland Psychiatric Hospital, Bodø, Norway;(9) Roskilde County Hospital, Fjorden, Roskilde;(10) Community Mental Health Centre, Department of Psychiatry, Bispebjerg Hospital, E, Copenhagen, Denmark
Abstract:Background: Few studies have investigated differences between subjective and externally assessed quality of life in individuals with a severe mental illness. In a sample of 387 patients with schizophrenia living in the community the present study investigated the association between subjective and interviewer-rated quality of life, clinical and sociodemographic factors related to the two assessments, and if discrepancies in the assessments were related to any clinical or social features of the patients. Method: The study was a Nordic multicentre study with a cross-sectional design. Instruments used were the Lancashire Quality of Life Profile, the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, the Interview Schedule for Social Interaction, Camberwell Assessment of Needs and General Assessment of Functioning. Results: The correlation between subjective and interviewer-rated quality of life was moderate (ICC=0.33). More severe affective symptoms, fewer emotional relations and a lower monthly income were related to poorer subjectively rated quality of life but in a stepwise multiple regression analysis accounted for only 14.1 of the variance. Poorer interviewer-rated quality of life was mainly related to a more severe psychopathology but also to a lower monthly income, fewer emotional relations and not being employed. Together these factors accounted for 45.5 of the variance. A greater discrepancy between the subjective and the interviewer rating was found in patients with less affective symptoms, unemployment, and a better social network. Conclusion: Only a moderate correlation between subjective and interviewer-assessed global quality of life was found, implying that the sources of assessment differed, as was also shown in subsequent regression models. It is concluded that both perspectives on the patient’s quality of life may be valuable for treatment planning, especially in cases where differences in quality of life assessment related to the patient’s psychopathology may be expected.
Keywords:Quality of life  Schizophrenia  Subjective versus external assessment
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