The aim of this study was to examine the relative contributions made by medical morbidity, psychiatric disorder, functional status, and hypochondrial attitudes to medical patients' opinions of their overall health status. The study was conducted in the general medical clinic of a large academic teaching hospital. Consecutive clinic visitors on randomly selected days were screened with a hypochondriasis self-report questionnaire, since the overall project was designed as a study of hypochondriasis. A random sample of the patients below a pre-established cutoff ( n=100), along with all those exceeding the cutoff ( n=88), returned to undergo a research battery. For this analysis, a representative sample of the entire clinic was reconstituted by weighting the data from patients above and below the screening cutoff in proportion to their prevalence in the clinic. Measures of psychiatric disorder (the Diagnostic Interview Schedule), personality disorder, functional status and disability, medical morbidity (from physician ratings and medical record audit), and hypochondriacal attitudes were obtained. Patient self-ratings of global health status were significantly correlated with aggregate medical morbidity ( r=0.36; P < 0.001); psychiatric morbidity ( r=0.48; P < 0.001); functional disability (for intermediate activities of daily living, r=0.62; P < 0.001); hypochondriacal attitudes ( r=0.79; P < 0.001); and with the tendency to somatize ( r=0.77; P < 0.001). Using multiple regression analysis, the most powerful correlates of perceived global health were hypochondriasis, somatization and disability (model R 2=0.762). Once these factors entered the regression model, objective measures of medical morbidity did not explain any additional variance in perceived health status. These findings suggest that how healthy patients feel is more closely related to their fears and beliefs about disease, and their tendency to somatize distress, than it is to clinical assessments of medical status. In addition, the findings confirm prior work indicating that functional impairment is also a key factor that patients take into account when judging how healthy they are.
Read full abstract