Clinical Activity and Psychopathological Knowledge Are Related to Real-World Performance of Leading International Psychiatrists in Diagnosing Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorders.
Bar Urkin, Josef Parnas, Andrea Raballo, Danny Koren
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: A recent empirical benchmark study designed to assess real-world diagnostic accuracy and reliability among 30 internationally renowned psychiatrists specializing in the schizophrenia spectrum found that only 33.3% of the psychiatrists correctly diagnosed two vignettes that included typical descriptions of disorders in the schizophrenia spectrum. The present study aimed to identify clinician-related factors that might account for this poor diagnostic performance, such as clinical versus research focus, years of clinical experience, and perceived usefulness of psychopathological concepts.
Methods: The study employed secondary analyses of data collected in in-depth online interviews with a group of 30 top-tier international psychiatrists specializing in schizophrenia spectrum disorders (SSDs). Participants were asked to make their best clinical diagnostic estimate for two written clinical vignettes developed on the basis of real-world SSD cases.
Results: We found that diagnostic accuracy was nearly significantly related to length of clinical experience, greater emphasis on practice versus research (estimated by low H-index), a proclivity to engage in psychotherapy, a nuanced view of psychosis as a spectrum concept, and acknowledgment of the relevance of self-disorders (i.e., subtle, enduring, nonpsychotic phenomenological anomalies of subjective experience) for SSD diagnosis.
Conclusion: Taken together, these findings suggest that continuous clinical activity and nuanced knowledge of psychopathology that goes beyond the guidelines of DSM and ICD are crucial for accurate diagnostic performance in real-world diagnostic encounters.
期刊介绍:
''Psychopathology'' is a record of research centered on findings, concepts, and diagnostic categories of phenomenological, experimental and clinical psychopathology. Studies published are designed to improve and deepen the knowledge and understanding of the pathogenesis and nature of psychopathological symptoms and psychological dysfunctions. Furthermore, the validity of concepts applied in the neurosciences of mental functions are evaluated in order to closely bring together the mind and the brain. Major topics of the journal are trajectories between biological processes and psychological dysfunction that can help us better understand a subject’s inner experiences and interpersonal behavior. Descriptive psychopathology, experimental psychopathology and neuropsychology, developmental psychopathology, transcultural psychiatry as well as philosophy-based phenomenology contribute to this field.