Cognitive screening and behavioural observation of functional ability in patients with multiple episode schizophrenia: an exploratory study

EN Bagge, E Esbjörnsson, KS Sunnerhagen - BMJ open, 2017 - bmjopen.bmj.com
EN Bagge, E Esbjörnsson, KS Sunnerhagen
BMJ open, 2017bmjopen.bmj.com
Objectives To evaluate the usability of a neuropsychological screening instrument and two
observation scales of everyday behaviour to describe cognitive and functional capacity of
patients with multiepisode schizophrenia and considerable care needs, who frequently
refuse to participate in cognitive testing or performance-based functional measurement.
Setting One psychiatric unit specialised in severe mental illness at the Sahlgrenska
University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden. Participants Patients were included consecutively …
Objectives
To evaluate the usability of a neuropsychological screening instrument and two observation scales of everyday behaviour to describe cognitive and functional capacity of patients with multiepisode schizophrenia and considerable care needs, who frequently refuse to participate in cognitive testing or performance-based functional measurement.
Setting
One psychiatric unit specialised in severe mental illness at the Sahlgrenska University Hospital, Gothenburg, Sweden.
Participants
Patients were included consecutively from date of admission to the unit. Inclusion criteria: age 18–65 years, International Classification of Diseases 10 diagnoses F20.0–F20.9 (schizophrenia) or F25.0-F25.9 (schizoaffective disorder) since at least 5 years. Exclusion criteria: acute serious psychotic episodes or physical illness, alcohol or drug abuse during the year before the study, diagnosed cerebral disorder at admission to the unit, and insufficient ability to speak Swedish. 64 patients filled the criteria and 19 accepted participation: 14 males, 5 females, median age 56 years.
Outcome measures
Barrow Neurological Institute Screen for Higher Cerebral Functions (BNIS) scores, measured by a psychologist; Frontal Systems Behaviour Scale (FrSBe) Family Version and Functional Independence Measure (FIM) V.4.0 scores, measured by nursing staff. Non-parametric statistics were consistently applied to process the data.
Results
Failure analysis showed differences regarding gender and subdiagnoses between participants and non-participants. All participants had BNIS scores indicating cognitive dysfunction. FrSBe group medians showed apathy and executive problems, indicating possible frontal lobe disturbance. FIM showed dependency on others for linguistic and social communication, everyday problem solving, and remembering persons and daily routines. Correlations between FrSBe and FIM (p≤0.01) suggested executive dysfunction being crucial to explain difficulties in performing activities of daily functioning.
Conclusions
Indications of considerable cognitive and functional difficulties found among the participants suggestedthat the instruments are clinically applicable for tentative assessment of cognitive and functional ability among patients with multiepisode schizophrenia and considerable care needs.
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