Abstract
A multidimensional study on symptom exaggeration in fibromyalgia patients is presented. The main aim is to detect discriminant patterns of malingered pain-related disability in order to develop a detailed protocol for the assessment of suspected malingering in cases of false or grossly exaggerated physical or psychological symptoms motivated by external incentives. Overall sample (N = 113) consisted of four groups: fibromyalgia patients not involved in litigation (n = 36), fibromyalgia patients involved in litigation (n = 26), analogue fibromyalgia-instructed participants (n = 21), and control group (n = 30). Several medical and psychological tests were administered to participants, including medical complementary tests, the Spanish adaptation of the General Self-Efficacy Scale (Baessler & Schwarzer, 1996), the Life Personal Self- Report Scale (Gonzalez-Ordi, Santamaria, & Casado-Morales, 2012), the Spanish adaptation of the Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnarie (FIQ, Monterde, Salvat, Montull, & Fernandez-Ballart, 2004), the Spanish version of the SF-36 Health Survey (Alonso, Prieto, & Anto, 1995), the Spanish adaptation of the Structured Inventory of Malingered Symptomatology (SIMS, Gonzalez-Ordi & Santamaria, 2009), and the Spanish adaptation of the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory-2-Restructured Form (MMPI-2-RF, Ben-Porath & Tellegen, 2008a). Data on mean group differences and predictive accuracy of the instruments used are presented. A protocol for the detection of malingering based on the differential profile scores between fibromyalgia non-litigants and litigants are also addressed. © 2013 Colegio Oficial de Psicologos de Madrid. All rights reserved.
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Ramírez, P. C., Ordi, H. G., Santamaría, P., Nieto, M. A. P., & Morales, M. I. C. (2013). Fibromialgia: ¿exageración o simulación? Clinica y Salud, 24(3), 185–195. https://doi.org/10.5093/cl2013a20
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