Home Current Issue Previous Issues For Authors Journal Info
Skip Navigation LinksHome > August 2008 - Volume 196 - Issue 8 > Subject and Interviewer Determinants of the Adequacy of the...
The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease:
August 2008 - Volume 196 - Issue 8 - pp 612-619
doi: 10.1097/NMD.0b013e318181327f
Original Article

Subject and Interviewer Determinants of the Adequacy of the Dynamic Interview

Perry, J Christopher MPH, MD; Fowler, J Christopher PhD; Howe, Ann Greif PhD

Collapse Box

Abstract

The dynamic interview is widely used in clinical and research settings, but factors associated with an adequate dynamic interview have not been systematically studied. Twenty-six subjects had a median of 3 dynamic interviews at least 6 months apart, conducted by 13 clinician interviewers. We examined the resulting 72 videotaped interviews for predictors of dynamic interview adequacy. Overall Dynamic Interview Adequacy was not explained by subject, occasion, or interviewer, per se, although significant negative effects were found for personality disorder and borderline personality scores and diagnoses of major depression and dysthymia, and positive effects for interviewer experience. Dynamic adequacy was related to overall breadth and depth of topic coverage (R2 = 0.424). However, in stepwise multiple linear regression, 5 therapeutic alliance factors together contributed an R2 = 0.768, diminishing the effect of topic coverage. Adequate dynamic interviews established a positive subject-interviewer interaction, facilitated subject exploration, and minimized technical interviewing errors, thereby yielding sufficient topic coverage.

© 2008 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

You currently do not have access to this article.

You may need to:

Note: If your society membership provides for full-access to this article, you may need to login on your society’s web site first.

Article Tools

You currently do not have access to this article.

You may need to:

Note: If your society membership provides for full-access to this article, you may need to login on your society’s web site first.

Search for Similar Articles
You may search for similar articles that contain these same keywords or you may modify the keyword list to augment your search.