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  • The Daily Dragon, by Mark Lacter
  • Testing the Fake Bad Scale

    There seems to be a lump in my throat much of the time.


    My sex life is satisfactory.


    I am troubled by attacks of nausea and vomiting.


    I am bothered by an upset stomach several times a week.


    I have nightmares every few nights.


    These true-false questions are part of the Fake Bad Scale, which is no doubt familiar to personal injury attorneys. The test is meant to spot plaintiffs who may be feigning their injuries, but some psychologists and lawyers argue that it identifies too many real victims. Some say it discriminates against women as well. “Virtually everyone is a malingerer according to this scale,” James Butcher, a retired University of Minnesota psychologist, tells the WSJ. “This is great for insurance companies, but not great for people.”


    The test asks a person to answer true or false to 43 statements, such as "My sleep is fitful and disturbed" and "I have nightmares every few nights." Someone who suffers from, say, post-traumatic stress disorder might legitimately answer "true" to these questions. But doing so would earn the test-taker two points toward the total of 23 or so that marks a person as a possible malingerer. Other test statements are "I have very few headaches" and "I have few or no pains." These are false, someone who has chronic headaches would say. Again, those replies would incur two more points toward a possible assessment as a malingerer. About a third of the questions relate to physical symptoms; there are questions about stress, sleep disturbance, and low energy. There is also a batch of questions related to denial of bad behavior. For instance, those who answer false to "I do not always tell the truth" get a point toward malingering.


    Paul Lees-Haley, the psychologist who created the test, say that while individual items "can be made to seem like evidence for a flawed" measuring process, what's important is the total score. He says the scale has "been tested empirically and shown to be effective." Dr. Lees-Haley says criticism is being orchestrated by plaintiffs' lawyers. One, Dorothy Clay Sims in Ocala, Fla., has written guides for other plaintiffs' lawyers on how to challenge the Fake Bad test. She is leading an effort to reverse the decision that incorporated it into the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory, which is used in diagnosing and treating patients at mental-health facilities and in screening people for sensitive jobs like law enforcement.


    [CUT]

    It recently figured in the case of Steven Thompson, a onetime truck driver in Iraq for the KBR unit of Halliburton Inc. He said he hadn't been able to hold a job since returning to the U.S. in 2004. Two doctors concluded Mr. Thompson had "chronic" and "fairly severe" post-traumatic stress disorder. He filed a disability claim that was denied by the insurer of Halliburton's since-sold KBR unit. Mr. Thompson appealed to the U.S. Labor Department, which has jurisdiction in such cases. He testified that memories of attacks on his convoys, seeing dead bodies and smelling burning flesh led to nightmares and sleeping problems that left him too irritable and difficult to work with to hold a job. A psychiatrist hired by the defense, John D. Griffith of Houston, concluded Mr. Thompson was exaggerating his symptoms, and cited his score of 32 on the Fake Bad Scale. A Labor Department administrative-law judge denied Mr. Thompson's claim, citing the test results along with inconsistencies in his testimony. Mr. Thompson is appealing.






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