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The Bradford Somatic Inventory

A Multi-ethnic Inventory of Somatic Symptoms Reported by Anxious and Depressed Patients in Britain and the Indo-Pakistan Subcontinent

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

D. B. Mumford
Affiliation:
Transcultural Psychiatry Unit; Lynfield Mount Hospital, Heights Lane, Bradford BD9 6DP, and Honorary Tutor, University of Leeds
J. T. Bavington
Affiliation:
University of Tehran, Iran
K. S. Bhatnagar
Affiliation:
University of Tehran, Iran
Y. Hussain
Affiliation:
University of Tehran, Iran
S. Mirza
Affiliation:
University of Tehran, Iran
M. M. Naraghi
Affiliation:
University of Tehran, Iran

Abstract

In the development and evaluation of a multi-ethnic inventory (the BSI) of somatic symptoms associated with anxiety and depression, symptoms were derived from psychiatric case notes of Pakistani and indigenous British patients with a clinical diagnosis of anxiety, depression, hysteria or hypochondriasis. The inventory was constructed simultaneously in Urdu and English. A pilot version of the BSI was checked against psychiatric case notes in north and south India, and Nepal. The revised BSI achieved over 90% coverage of all somatic symptoms recorded in each centre. The linguistic equivalence of the Urdu and the English versions was established in a bilingual student population in Pakistan. Conceptual equivalence of the BSI was explored using factor analysis of responses by functional patients presenting to medical clinics in Britain and Pakistan. Four principal factors (head, chest, abdomen, fatigue) were similar in both populations.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1991 

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