The Assessment of Competence to Make a Treatment Decision: An Empirical Approach

Author:

Bean Graham1,Nishisato Shizuhiko2,Rector Neil A3,Glancy Graham4

Affiliation:

1. Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Culture, Community and Health Studies, Clarke Institute of Psychiatry, Toronto, Ontario

2. Professor, Measurement, Evaluation and Computer Applications, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Toronto, Ontario

3. Lecturer, Institute of Psychiatry, University of London, England

4. Assistant Professor of Psychiatry and METFORS, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario

Abstract

Objective: To compare physicians' judgements of competency in routine clinical practice with the findings obtained from a structured clinical interview. Methods: Ninety-six patients referred for electroconvulsive therapy were administered the Competency Interview Schedule (CIS) prior to their first treatment. Cluster analysis was employed to categorize patients to 1 of 5 cluster centres represented by case studies previously judged competent or incompetent by lawyers and health professionals. Results: A match-mismatch table revealed 88% (N = 66) of the 75 patients found competent by the attending physician and 90.5% (N = 19) of the 21 patients found incompetent by the attending physician were classified in agreement with the CIS. The 9 misclassified patients found competent by the attending physician but classified incompetent by the CIS had consented to treatment. The 2 misclassified patients found incompetent by the attending physician but classified competent by the CIS had refused treatment. Examination of individual item scores from the CIS indicated that, in some cases, a different standard of competency was applied in routine clinical practice depending upon the patient's treatment decision. Conclusions: The CIS is presented as a useful guide for clinicians with an interest in competency evaluations but caution is advised in using the instrument to make formal evaluations of competency owing to the imprecise definition of competency in various jurisdictions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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