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Journal Article

Citation

van Beek J, Vuijk PJ, Harte JM, Smit BL, Nijman H, Scherder EJ. Int. J. Offender Ther. Comp. Criminol. 2014; 59(7): 743-756.

Affiliation

VU University Amsterdam, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0306624X14529077

PMID

24709831

Abstract

Severe behavioral problems, aggression, unlawful behavior, and uncooperativeness make the forensic psychiatric population both hard to treat and study. To fine-tune treatment and evaluate results, valid measurement is vital. The Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale-Extended (BPRS-E) is a widely used scale for assessing psychiatric symptoms, with a stable factor structure over various patient groups. For the first time, its usefulness for forensic psychiatric patients was studied by means of an exploratory factor analysis on 302 patients in a penitentiary psychiatric center. A five-factor solution fitted the data best and showed large overlap with previous research done in both in- and outpatient populations with schizophrenia and mixed diagnoses. Around 45% of the patients did not fully comply. Items relying most on self-report caused the most non-adherence, possibly because of difficulty with verbalizing distress. These items loaded on the factors psychosis and affect. The BPRS-E is a suitable instrument for forensic use. Future research and clinical practice should focus on alignment with forensic patients to improve measurement, understanding, and eventually therapeutic interventions.


Language: en

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