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Research ArticleARTICLES

A Clinical Study of Competency in Psychiatric Inpatients

Stephen B. Billick, Peter W. Naylor, Mathew F. Majeske, Woodward Burgert and Glen P. Davis
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online December 1996, 24 (4) 505-511;
Stephen B. Billick
MD
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Peter W. Naylor
MD
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Mathew F. Majeske
MD
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Woodward Burgert III
BA
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Glen P. Davis
BA
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Abstract

A 15-item questionnaire used to evaluate competency to consent to psychiatric hospitalization was validated using a blind forensic psychiatric interview. The statistical correlation was excellent with p < .001. The questionnaire also correlated highly with the Mini-Mental State Exam (p < .05), the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (p < .05), and the Weschler Adult Intelligence Scale-Revised vocabulary subtest (p < .01). This questionnaire may be a useful instrument for preliminary screening of psychiatric patients for competency to consent to hospitalization and general psychiatric treatment.

  • Copyright © 1996, The American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
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Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online: 24 (4)
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online
Vol. 24, Issue 4
1 Dec 1996
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A Clinical Study of Competency in Psychiatric Inpatients
Stephen B. Billick, Peter W. Naylor, Mathew F. Majeske, Woodward Burgert, Glen P. Davis
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online Dec 1996, 24 (4) 505-511;

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A Clinical Study of Competency in Psychiatric Inpatients
Stephen B. Billick, Peter W. Naylor, Mathew F. Majeske, Woodward Burgert, Glen P. Davis
Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online Dec 1996, 24 (4) 505-511;
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