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Telephone versus In-Person Clinical and Health Status Assessment Interviews in Patients with Bipolar Disorder
59
Citations
30
References
1997
Year
Family MedicineMental Health MonitoringPsychiatric EvaluationPsychiatryMood SymptomDepressionPsychologyTelephone InterviewBipolar Disorder PatientsSocial SciencesClinical PsychiatryPsychiatric DisorderMental HealthMood SpectrumMedicinePsychopathologyBipolar DisorderVersus In-person Clinical
We evaluated the correspondence between in-person- and telephone interview-derived data on affective symptoms, health-related quality of life, disability days, and medication compliance in patients with bipolar disorder. Twenty-eight outpatients with DSM-III-R-documented bipolar disorder were randomly assigned to an initial in-person or telephone interview. An average of 4.0 days later, they were reassessed by the other interview method. Results indicate good to excellent agreement between telephone and in-person interviews on measures of mania (intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) = 0.92) and depression symptoms (ICC = 0.90), suicide risk (kappa = 0.80), and alcohol use (kappa = 0.61), scores on the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item Short-Form Health Survey (ICCs = 0.66-0.92), and medication compliance (ICCs = 0.50-0.66). Measures of bed disability days (ICC = 0.34) and restricted activity days (ICC = 0.66) showed less agreement. Telephone interviews are feasible and reliable for collecting data on psychiatric and other health-related outcomes in bipolar disorder patients.
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