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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Rogers, E. Sallya; * | Millner, Uma Chandrikaa | Brandt, Dianeb | Chan, Leightonb | Jette, Alanc | Marfeo, Elizabethd | Ni, Pengshengc | Rasch, Elizabethb
Affiliations: [a] Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Sargent College, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA | [b] Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA | [c] Health and Disability Research Institute, School of Public Health, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA | [d] Department of Occupational Therapy, Tufts University, Medford, MA, USA
Correspondence: [*] Address for correspondence: E. Sally Rogers, Center for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Sargent College, 940 Commonwealth Ave West, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA. Fax: +1 617 353 7700; E-mail: erogers@bu.edu.
Abstract: BACKGROUND:Assessing functioning and disability among individuals with mental and behavioral health disorders has historically relied on deriving accurate psychiatric diagnoses and assessing symptoms. However, growing empirical evidence suggests that this approach is inadequate to determine real world performance, particularly with respect to work. OBJECTIVE:We examined a performance-based approach to the assessment of work functioning and its relationship to mental and behavioral health status. METHODS:A cross-sectional study was conducted at two mental health programs. Trained employment providers conducted performance-based assessments of work function and ratings of mental and behavioral health while study participants self-reported their mental/behavioral health functioning. We hypothesized that participant and provider ratings of mental/behavioral health would be moderately correlated with performance-based assessments of work function. RESULTS:We found no significant correlation between participants’ self-report of their mental and behavioral health and performance-based assessments of work. Employment providers’ ratings of participants’ mental/behavioral health were moderately correlated with performance-based measures of work. Finally, we found low concordance between employment providers and study participants’ with respect to ratings of their mental/behavioral health. CONCLUSIONS:Contrary to our hypotheses, ratings of mental/behavioral health were only moderately correlated with performance-based measures of work. Results confirm earlier research suggesting that it is difficult to predict work performance from participants’ self-reports of their mental/behavioral health alone. Performance-based assessments of work capacity as well as ratings of mental and behavioral health may both be needed for a more complete and complimentary picture of the ability of individuals with mental and behavioral health disorders to function in the work place.
Keywords: Work performance, work capacity, individuals with psychiatric disability, in vivo assessment, concordance
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-182776
Journal: Work, vol. 61, no. 1, pp. 11-20, 2018
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