Rating chronic medical illness burden in geropsychiatric practice and research: Application of the Cumulative Illness Rating Scale

Reliable quantitative ratings of chronic medical illness burden have proved to be difficult in geropsychiatric practice and research. Thus, the purpose of the study was to demonstrate the feasibility and reliability of a modified version of the Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS; Linn et al., 1968) in providing quantitative ratings of chronic illness burden. The modified CIRS was operationalized with a manual of guidelines geared toward the geriatric patient and for clarity was designated the CIRS(G). A total of 141 elderly outpatient subjects (two medical clinic groups of 20 each, 45 recurrent depressed subjects, 21 spousally bereaved subjects, and 35 healthy controls) received comprehensive physical examinations, reviews of symptoms, and laboratory testing. These data were then used by nurse practitioners, physician's assistants, and geriatric psychiatrists to compute CIRS(G) ratings of chronic illness burden. As hypothesized, analysis of variance demonstrated significant differences among groups with respect to total medical illness burden, which was highest among medical clinic patients and lowest in control subjects. Good interrater reliability (i.e., intraclass correlations of 0.78 and 0.88 in a subsample of 10 outpatients and a separate group of 10 inpatients, respectively) was achieved for CIRS(G) total scores. Among medical clinic patients, a significant correlation was found, as expected, between CIRS(G) chronic illness burden and capability as quantified by the Older Americans Activities of Daily Living Scale; and between CIRS(G) scores and physicians' global estimates of medical burden. Finally, with repeated measures of illness burden approximately 1 year from symptom baseline, significant rises were detected, as expected. The current data suggest that the CIRS(G) can be successfully applied in medically and psychiatrically impaired elderly subjects, with good interrater reliability and face validity (credibility).

[1]  Nitin R. Patel,et al.  A Network Algorithm for Performing Fisher's Exact Test in r × c Contingency Tables , 1983 .

[2]  L. Rubenstein,et al.  Formal Geriatric Assessment Instruments and the Care of Older General Medical Outpatients , 1990, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[3]  M. Karpf,et al.  The medical evaluation of elderly patients with major depression. , 1988, Journal of gerontology.

[4]  A. Stewart,et al.  The MOS short-form general health survey. Reliability and validity in a patient population. , 1988, Medical care.

[5]  H. Cohen,et al.  Depression in elderly hospitalized patients with medical illness. , 1988, Archives of internal medicine.

[6]  J. Ouslander Physical Illness and Depression in the Elderly , 1982, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[7]  K Kroenke,et al.  Functional Assessment of the Elderly: A Comparison of Standard Instruments With Clinical Judgment , 1987 .

[8]  W. Applegate,et al.  Instruments for the functional assessment of older patients. , 1990, The New England journal of medicine.

[9]  M. Tinetti,et al.  A simple procedure for general screening for functional disability in elderly patients. , 1990, Annals of internal medicine.

[10]  B. Linn,et al.  CUMULATIVE ILLNESS RATING SCALE , 1968, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[11]  R. C. Hall,et al.  Physical illness manifesting as psychiatric disease. II. Analysis of a state hospital inpatient population. , 1980, Archives of general psychiatry.

[12]  A. Stewart,et al.  Functional status and well-being of patients with chronic conditions. Results from the Medical Outcomes Study. , 1989, JAMA.

[13]  C. Winograd,et al.  Assessment of Depression in Geriatric Medical Outpatients: The Validity of Two Screening Measures , 1987, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[14]  S. Borson,et al.  Symptomatic Depression in Elderly Medical Outpatients , 1986, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[15]  S. Borson,et al.  Depression and physical illness among elderly general medical clinic patients. , 1986, Journal of affective disorders.

[16]  D. Blazer,et al.  Epidemiology of dysphoria and depression in an elderly population. , 1980, The American journal of psychiatry.

[17]  L. Fried,et al.  Morbidity as a focus of preventive health care in the elderly. , 1988, Epidemiologic reviews.