
Psychiatr Serv 49:1440-1444, November 1998
© 1998 American Psychiatric Association
Use of Peer Ratings to Assess Sociability Among Inpatients With Severe Psychiatric Disorders
David L. Penn, Ph.D.,
Dorie Reed, Ph.D.,
Mary Sullivan, M.S.W. and
Will Spaulding, Ph.D.
OBJECTIVE: A critical component of inpatient treatment for persons with severe psychiatric disorders is an evaluation of their social impairments. Most existing methods for such evaluations involve staff input and can be both time-consuming and expensive. This paper reports on the use of peer ratings as a method for assessing sociability, an aspect of social functioning in this clinical population. METHODS: Thirty-two inpatients with severe psychiatric disorders who had spent an average of 18 months on an inpatient unit in a state facility rated the popularity of their inpatient peers by completing a 7-point scale measuring how much they enjoyed visiting with each patient. The reliability of peer ratings and their association with staff ratings of patients' behavior on the unit were assessed. Results and conclusions: The peer ratings had excellent test-retest reliability and were highly associated with staff members' independent evaluations of patients' behavior. Peer ratings appear to have promise as a measure of social functioning among inpatients with severe psychiatric disorders.
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