Diagnostic concordance for DSM-IV sleep disorders: a report from the APA/NIMH DSM-IV field trial
OBJECTIVE: The frequency and ranking of DSM-IV sleep disorder diagnoses of clinical patients with complaints of insomnia, as well as rates of diagnostic agreement and disagreement between two types of interviewers, were investigated. METHOD: Interviewers at five clinical sites assessed 216 patients...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of psychiatry 1994-09, Vol.151 (9), p.1351-1360 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | OBJECTIVE: The frequency and ranking of DSM-IV sleep disorder diagnoses
of clinical patients with complaints of insomnia, as well as rates of
diagnostic agreement and disagreement between two types of interviewers,
were investigated. METHOD: Interviewers at five clinical sites assessed 216
patients referred for insomnia complaints. One sleep specialist and one
general clinician interviewed each patient in an unstructured clinical
interview, assigned DSM-IV diagnoses, and indicated their reactions to the
diagnostic system. RESULTS: Insomnia due to another mental disorder was the
most frequent DSM-IV diagnosis across sites, followed by primary insomnia.
Interviewers at the five sites differed significantly in the rankings they
assigned to different diagnoses. In addition, sleep specialists at most
sites diagnosed psychiatric forms of insomnia more frequently than
nonspecialists. Kappa values for agreement between the two types of
clinicians on multiple DSM-IV sleep diagnoses ranged from 0.26 to 0.80
across sites, indicating moderate agreement overall. Kappa values for
individual diagnoses varied across sites and specific diagnoses and ranged
from poor to excellent. Interviewers' ratings of their confidence in
diagnoses and the fit and ease of use of the DSM-IV categories also showed
significant variability related to site and type of interviewer.
CONCLUSIONS: The distribution of diagnoses highlights the importance of
psychiatric and behavioral factors in the assessment of insomnia. Site-
related variability indicates a need for greater standardization in the
application of sleep disorder diagnostic criteria. Diagnostic concordance
for these diagnoses, while only moderately good, likely reflects actual
clinical practice and would be improved through the use of standardized (or
structured) interviews and increased training. |
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ISSN: | 0002-953X 1535-7228 |
DOI: | 10.1176/ajp.151.9.1351 |