A brief mental health and substance abuse screener for persons with HIV

Mental illness and substance abuse are common among HIV-infected individuals and are associated with negative outcomes, including poor medication adherence. Therefore, quick and effective methods for detecting these co-occurring disorders are necessary for health care practitioners. This article rep...

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Veröffentlicht in:AIDS patient care and STDs 2005-02, Vol.19 (2), p.89-99
Hauptverfasser: Whetten, Kathryn, Reif, Susan, Swartz, Marvin, Stevens, Rachel, Ostermann, Jan, Hanisch, Laura, Eron, Jr, Joseph J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mental illness and substance abuse are common among HIV-infected individuals and are associated with negative outcomes, including poor medication adherence. Therefore, quick and effective methods for detecting these co-occurring disorders are necessary for health care practitioners. This article reports on the creation and preliminary testing of a brief screening tool, the Substance Abuse and Mental Illness Symptoms Screener (SAMISS). The 13-item screener was developed primarily from existing scales and administered to HIV-infected individuals receiving care at infectious diseases clinics in the Southeast. To assess the validity of the SAMISS, a subset of those who screened positive for both mental illness symptoms and substance use problems (n = 207) were administered the Structured Clinical Interview for DSMIV Disorders (SCID). The positive predictive value of the screener in comparison to the SCID was 98.6% for mental disorders and 98.6% for substance use disorders. The agreement between specific screener symptoms and their corresponding SCID diagnoses was relatively high for alcohol dependence (kappa = 0.50, p < 0.001), drug dependence (kappa = 0.30, p < 0.001), and drug abuse (kappa = 0.42, p
ISSN:1087-2914
1557-7449
DOI:10.1089/apc.2005.19.89