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The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application

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The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application. / Palmier-Claus, J.E.; Ainsworth, J.; Machin, M. et al.
In: BMC Psychiatry, Vol. 12, 172, 2012.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Palmier-Claus, JE, Ainsworth, J, Machin, M, Barrowclough, C, Dunn, G, Barkus, E, Rogers, A, Wykes, T, Kapur, S, Buchan, I, Salter, E & Lewis, SW 2012, 'The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application', BMC Psychiatry, vol. 12, 172. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-12-172

APA

Palmier-Claus, J. E., Ainsworth, J., Machin, M., Barrowclough, C., Dunn, G., Barkus, E., Rogers, A., Wykes, T., Kapur, S., Buchan, I., Salter, E., & Lewis, S. W. (2012). The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application. BMC Psychiatry, 12, Article 172. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-244X-12-172

Vancouver

Palmier-Claus JE, Ainsworth J, Machin M, Barrowclough C, Dunn G, Barkus E et al. The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application. BMC Psychiatry. 2012;12:172. doi: 10.1186/1471-244X-12-172

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Bibtex

@article{2b10c81e6b774989826ce9779b621005,
title = "The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application",
abstract = "BackgroundSemi-structured interview scales for psychosis are the gold standard approach to assessing psychotic and other symptoms. However, such assessments have limitations such as recall bias, averaging, insensitivity to change and variable interrater reliability. Ambulant, real-time self-report assessment devices may hold advantages over interview measures, but it needs to be shown that the data thus collected are valid, and the collection method is acceptable, feasible and safe. We report on a monitoring system for the assessment of psychosis using smartphone technology. The primary aims were to: i) assess validity through correlations of item responses with those on widely accepted interview assessments of psychosis, and ii) examine compliance to the procedure in individuals with psychosis of varying severity.MethodsA total of 44 participants (acute or remitted DSM-4 schizophrenia and related disorders, and prodromal) completed 14 branching self-report items concerning key psychotic symptoms on a touch-screen mobile phone when prompted by an alarm at six pseudo-random times, each day, for one week. Face to face PANSS and CDS interviews were conducted before and after the assessment period blind to the ambulant data.ResultsCompliance as defined by completion of at least 33% of all possible data-points over seven days was 82%. In the 36 compliant participants, 5 items (delusions, hallucinations, suspiciousness, anxiety, hopelessness) showed moderate to strong (rho 0.6-0.8) associations with corresponding items from interview rating scales. Four items showed no significant correlation with rating scales: each was an item based on observable behaviour. Ambulant ratings showed excellent test-retest reliability and sensitivity to change.ConclusionsAmbulatory monitoring of symptoms several times daily using smartphone software applications represents a feasible and valid way of assessing psychotic phenomena for research and clinical management purposes. Further evaluation required over longer assessment periods, in clinical trials and service settings.",
author = "J.E. Palmier-Claus and J. Ainsworth and M. Machin and C. Barrowclough and G. Dunn and E. Barkus and A. Rogers and T. Wykes and S. Kapur and I. Buchan and E. Salter and S.W. Lewis",
year = "2012",
doi = "10.1186/1471-244X-12-172",
language = "English",
volume = "12",
journal = "BMC Psychiatry",
issn = "1471-244X",
publisher = "NLM (Medline)",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The feasibility and validity of ambulatory self-report of psychotic symptoms using a smartphone software application

AU - Palmier-Claus, J.E.

AU - Ainsworth, J.

AU - Machin, M.

AU - Barrowclough, C.

AU - Dunn, G.

AU - Barkus, E.

AU - Rogers, A.

AU - Wykes, T.

AU - Kapur, S.

AU - Buchan, I.

AU - Salter, E.

AU - Lewis, S.W.

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - BackgroundSemi-structured interview scales for psychosis are the gold standard approach to assessing psychotic and other symptoms. However, such assessments have limitations such as recall bias, averaging, insensitivity to change and variable interrater reliability. Ambulant, real-time self-report assessment devices may hold advantages over interview measures, but it needs to be shown that the data thus collected are valid, and the collection method is acceptable, feasible and safe. We report on a monitoring system for the assessment of psychosis using smartphone technology. The primary aims were to: i) assess validity through correlations of item responses with those on widely accepted interview assessments of psychosis, and ii) examine compliance to the procedure in individuals with psychosis of varying severity.MethodsA total of 44 participants (acute or remitted DSM-4 schizophrenia and related disorders, and prodromal) completed 14 branching self-report items concerning key psychotic symptoms on a touch-screen mobile phone when prompted by an alarm at six pseudo-random times, each day, for one week. Face to face PANSS and CDS interviews were conducted before and after the assessment period blind to the ambulant data.ResultsCompliance as defined by completion of at least 33% of all possible data-points over seven days was 82%. In the 36 compliant participants, 5 items (delusions, hallucinations, suspiciousness, anxiety, hopelessness) showed moderate to strong (rho 0.6-0.8) associations with corresponding items from interview rating scales. Four items showed no significant correlation with rating scales: each was an item based on observable behaviour. Ambulant ratings showed excellent test-retest reliability and sensitivity to change.ConclusionsAmbulatory monitoring of symptoms several times daily using smartphone software applications represents a feasible and valid way of assessing psychotic phenomena for research and clinical management purposes. Further evaluation required over longer assessment periods, in clinical trials and service settings.

AB - BackgroundSemi-structured interview scales for psychosis are the gold standard approach to assessing psychotic and other symptoms. However, such assessments have limitations such as recall bias, averaging, insensitivity to change and variable interrater reliability. Ambulant, real-time self-report assessment devices may hold advantages over interview measures, but it needs to be shown that the data thus collected are valid, and the collection method is acceptable, feasible and safe. We report on a monitoring system for the assessment of psychosis using smartphone technology. The primary aims were to: i) assess validity through correlations of item responses with those on widely accepted interview assessments of psychosis, and ii) examine compliance to the procedure in individuals with psychosis of varying severity.MethodsA total of 44 participants (acute or remitted DSM-4 schizophrenia and related disorders, and prodromal) completed 14 branching self-report items concerning key psychotic symptoms on a touch-screen mobile phone when prompted by an alarm at six pseudo-random times, each day, for one week. Face to face PANSS and CDS interviews were conducted before and after the assessment period blind to the ambulant data.ResultsCompliance as defined by completion of at least 33% of all possible data-points over seven days was 82%. In the 36 compliant participants, 5 items (delusions, hallucinations, suspiciousness, anxiety, hopelessness) showed moderate to strong (rho 0.6-0.8) associations with corresponding items from interview rating scales. Four items showed no significant correlation with rating scales: each was an item based on observable behaviour. Ambulant ratings showed excellent test-retest reliability and sensitivity to change.ConclusionsAmbulatory monitoring of symptoms several times daily using smartphone software applications represents a feasible and valid way of assessing psychotic phenomena for research and clinical management purposes. Further evaluation required over longer assessment periods, in clinical trials and service settings.

U2 - 10.1186/1471-244X-12-172

DO - 10.1186/1471-244X-12-172

M3 - Journal article

VL - 12

JO - BMC Psychiatry

JF - BMC Psychiatry

SN - 1471-244X

M1 - 172

ER -