High agreement of self-report and physician-diagnosed somatic conditions yields limited bias in examining mental-physical comorbidity.

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High agreement of self-report and physician-diagnosed somatic conditions yields limited bias in examining mental-physical comorbidity. / Baumeister, Harald; Kriston, Levente; Bengel, Jürgen; Härter, Martin.

in: J CLIN EPIDEMIOL, 2009.

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@article{570fc31d75e64dc0bf0e1e4faeba4cbc,
title = "High agreement of self-report and physician-diagnosed somatic conditions yields limited bias in examining mental-physical comorbidity.",
abstract = "OBJECTIVE: To quantify the misclassification bias of self-reported somatic diseases and its impact on the estimation of comorbidity with mental disorders. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Data were drawn from the German National Health Interview and Examination Survey (N=7,124), which assessed both self-reported and physician-diagnosed somatic diseases. Eight chronic diseases were examined: coronary heart disease, heart failure, asthma, chronic bronchitis, diabetes, cancer, arthrosis, and arthritis. Mental disorders were assessed by means of the Munich-Composite International Interview. RESULTS: The agreement of case ascertainment by patient self-report and physician diagnosis was high (kappa: 0.74-0.92), except for arthritis (0.53). False-positive and false-negative disease statuses were partly associated with age, sex, socioeconomic status, somatic comorbidities, marital status, and mood and anxiety disorders. In most conditions, the odds ratios (ORs) of comorbid mental disorders based on self-reported diseases were slightly overestimated with regard to mood disorders (relative OR: 0.91-1.38), whereas there proved to be no such trend regarding anxiety disorders (0.82-1.05). Substance disorders were partly biased without showing an interpretable trend across diseases (0.49-2.58). CONCLUSIONS: Evaluation of mental-physical comorbidity based on self-reported and physician-diagnosed physical conditions yielded similar results, with modestly inflated ORs for mood disorders for several self-reported physical conditions.",
author = "Harald Baumeister and Levente Kriston and J{\"u}rgen Bengel and Martin H{\"a}rter",
year = "2009",
language = "Deutsch",
journal = "J CLIN EPIDEMIOL",
issn = "0895-4356",
publisher = "Elsevier USA",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - High agreement of self-report and physician-diagnosed somatic conditions yields limited bias in examining mental-physical comorbidity.

AU - Baumeister, Harald

AU - Kriston, Levente

AU - Bengel, Jürgen

AU - Härter, Martin

PY - 2009

Y1 - 2009

N2 - OBJECTIVE: To quantify the misclassification bias of self-reported somatic diseases and its impact on the estimation of comorbidity with mental disorders. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Data were drawn from the German National Health Interview and Examination Survey (N=7,124), which assessed both self-reported and physician-diagnosed somatic diseases. Eight chronic diseases were examined: coronary heart disease, heart failure, asthma, chronic bronchitis, diabetes, cancer, arthrosis, and arthritis. Mental disorders were assessed by means of the Munich-Composite International Interview. RESULTS: The agreement of case ascertainment by patient self-report and physician diagnosis was high (kappa: 0.74-0.92), except for arthritis (0.53). False-positive and false-negative disease statuses were partly associated with age, sex, socioeconomic status, somatic comorbidities, marital status, and mood and anxiety disorders. In most conditions, the odds ratios (ORs) of comorbid mental disorders based on self-reported diseases were slightly overestimated with regard to mood disorders (relative OR: 0.91-1.38), whereas there proved to be no such trend regarding anxiety disorders (0.82-1.05). Substance disorders were partly biased without showing an interpretable trend across diseases (0.49-2.58). CONCLUSIONS: Evaluation of mental-physical comorbidity based on self-reported and physician-diagnosed physical conditions yielded similar results, with modestly inflated ORs for mood disorders for several self-reported physical conditions.

AB - OBJECTIVE: To quantify the misclassification bias of self-reported somatic diseases and its impact on the estimation of comorbidity with mental disorders. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Data were drawn from the German National Health Interview and Examination Survey (N=7,124), which assessed both self-reported and physician-diagnosed somatic diseases. Eight chronic diseases were examined: coronary heart disease, heart failure, asthma, chronic bronchitis, diabetes, cancer, arthrosis, and arthritis. Mental disorders were assessed by means of the Munich-Composite International Interview. RESULTS: The agreement of case ascertainment by patient self-report and physician diagnosis was high (kappa: 0.74-0.92), except for arthritis (0.53). False-positive and false-negative disease statuses were partly associated with age, sex, socioeconomic status, somatic comorbidities, marital status, and mood and anxiety disorders. In most conditions, the odds ratios (ORs) of comorbid mental disorders based on self-reported diseases were slightly overestimated with regard to mood disorders (relative OR: 0.91-1.38), whereas there proved to be no such trend regarding anxiety disorders (0.82-1.05). Substance disorders were partly biased without showing an interpretable trend across diseases (0.49-2.58). CONCLUSIONS: Evaluation of mental-physical comorbidity based on self-reported and physician-diagnosed physical conditions yielded similar results, with modestly inflated ORs for mood disorders for several self-reported physical conditions.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

JO - J CLIN EPIDEMIOL

JF - J CLIN EPIDEMIOL

SN - 0895-4356

ER -