TY - JOUR
T1 - Validity of the Severity of Psychiatric Illness Rating Scale in a Sample of Inpatients on a Psychogeriatric Unit
AU - Lyons, John S.
AU - Colletta, Joan
AU - Devens, Maria
AU - Finkel, Sanford I.
PY - 1995/9
Y1 - 1995/9
N2 - Previous efforts to define the case mix of psychiatric inpatients have generally relied on the use of psychiatric diagnosis, and have had little success elucidating the relationship between clinical outcome and resource utilization. The Severity of Psychiatric Illness (SPI) rating scale, a reliable chart-based system using nine clinical rating dimensions, has been developed by one of the authors for use in studying the case mix of psychiatric inpatients. This report is the first describing this scale. For a sample of 244 psychogeriatric patients, all but one of the dimensions were significantly correlated with at least one of the five baseline clinical assessments, and all but one of the SPI items were correlated with outcome assessment. Four dimensions of the SPI were related to clinical outcomes. The SPI also predicted length of stay (predicting 23% of the variance for patients discharged to their homes). This study provides strong evidence for the construct and predictive validity of the SPI among older adult psychiatric inpatients.
AB - Previous efforts to define the case mix of psychiatric inpatients have generally relied on the use of psychiatric diagnosis, and have had little success elucidating the relationship between clinical outcome and resource utilization. The Severity of Psychiatric Illness (SPI) rating scale, a reliable chart-based system using nine clinical rating dimensions, has been developed by one of the authors for use in studying the case mix of psychiatric inpatients. This report is the first describing this scale. For a sample of 244 psychogeriatric patients, all but one of the dimensions were significantly correlated with at least one of the five baseline clinical assessments, and all but one of the SPI items were correlated with outcome assessment. Four dimensions of the SPI were related to clinical outcomes. The SPI also predicted length of stay (predicting 23% of the variance for patients discharged to their homes). This study provides strong evidence for the construct and predictive validity of the SPI among older adult psychiatric inpatients.
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U2 - 10.1017/S1041610295002158
DO - 10.1017/S1041610295002158
M3 - Article
C2 - 8821348
AN - SCOPUS:0029567046
SN - 1041-6102
VL - 7
SP - 407
EP - 416
JO - International Psychogeriatrics
JF - International Psychogeriatrics
IS - 3
ER -