Rogers Richard, Payne Joshua W, Berry David T R, Granacher Robert P
Department of Psychology, University of North Texas, Denton, TX 76203-1280, USA.
Law Hum Behav. 2009 Jun;33(3):213-24. doi: 10.1007/s10979-008-9145-9. Epub 2008 Aug 5.
The Structured Interview of Reported Symptoms (SIRS; Rogers et al., Structured interview of reported symptoms (SIRS) and professional manual, 1992) is a well-validated psychological measure for the assessment of feigned mental disorders (FMD) in clinical, forensic, and correctional settings. Comparatively little work has evaluated its usefulness in compensation and disability contexts. The present study examined SIRS data from 569 individuals undergoing forensic neuropsychiatric examinations for the purposes of workers' compensation, personal injury, or disability proceedings. Using bootstrapping comparisons, three primary groups were identified: FMD, feigned cognitive impairment (FCI), genuine-both (GEN-Both) that encompasses both genuine disorders (GEN-D) and genuine-cognitive presentation (GEN-C). Consistent with the SIRS main objective, very large effect sizes (M Cohen's d = 1.94) were observed between FMD and GEN-Both groups. Although not intended for this purpose, moderate to large effect sizes (M d = 1.13) were found between FCI and GEN-Both groups. An important consideration is whether SIRS results are unduly affected by common diagnoses or clinical conditions. Systematic comparisons were performed based on common disorders (major depressive disorder, PTSD, and other anxiety disorders), presence of a cognitive disorder (dementia, amnestic disorder, or cognitive disorder NOS), or intellectual deficits (FSIQ < 80). Generally, the magnitude of differences on the SIRS primary scales was small and nonsignificant, providing evidence of the SIRS generalizability across these diagnostic categories. Finally, the usefulness of the SIRS improbable failure-revised (IF-R) scale was tested as a FCI screen. Although it has potential in ruling out genuine cases, the IF-R should not be used as a feigning screen.
报告症状结构化访谈(SIRS;罗杰斯等人,《报告症状结构化访谈(SIRS)及专业手册》,1992年)是一种经过充分验证的心理测量工具,用于在临床、法医和教养环境中评估伪装精神障碍(FMD)。相对而言,很少有研究评估其在赔偿和残疾方面的效用。本研究检查了569名接受法医神经精神病学检查的个体的SIRS数据,这些检查是为了进行工伤赔偿、人身伤害或残疾程序。通过自抽样比较,确定了三个主要组:FMD组、伪装认知障碍(FCI)组、真性合并组(GEN-Both),后者包括真性障碍(GEN-D)和真性认知表现(GEN-C)。与SIRS的主要目标一致,在FMD组和GEN-Both组之间观察到非常大的效应量(M Cohen's d = 1.94)。尽管并非为此目的设计,但在FCI组和GEN-Both组之间发现了中度至大的效应量(M d = 1.13)。一个重要的考虑因素是SIRS结果是否会受到常见诊断或临床状况的过度影响。基于常见疾病(重度抑郁症、创伤后应激障碍和其他焦虑症)、认知障碍(痴呆、遗忘症或未特定的认知障碍)或智力缺陷(FSIQ < 80)进行了系统比较。一般来说,SIRS主要量表上的差异幅度较小且无统计学意义,这为SIRS在这些诊断类别中的通用性提供了证据。最后,对SIRS不太可能失败修订版(IF-R)量表作为FCI筛查工具的效用进行了测试。尽管它在排除真性病例方面有潜力,但IF-R量表不应用作伪装筛查工具。