Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective study

Background: Capacity is a dynamic, task-specific, time-specific clinical construct that may be impaired either temporarily or permanently due to the medical or psychiatric illness, necessitating varying degrees of support from caregivers. There is paucity of Indian prospective studies focusing on th...

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Main Authors: N Aman, Swapna A. Pandurangi, Pratibha R. Kulkarni, Ranganath R. Kulkarni
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2025-04-01
Series:Indian Journal of Psychiatry
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/indianjpsychiatry.indianjpsychiatry_977_24
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author N Aman
Swapna A. Pandurangi
Pratibha R. Kulkarni
Ranganath R. Kulkarni
author_facet N Aman
Swapna A. Pandurangi
Pratibha R. Kulkarni
Ranganath R. Kulkarni
author_sort N Aman
collection DOAJ
description Background: Capacity is a dynamic, task-specific, time-specific clinical construct that may be impaired either temporarily or permanently due to the medical or psychiatric illness, necessitating varying degrees of support from caregivers. There is paucity of Indian prospective studies focusing on the mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness (SOI) in psychiatric in-patients. Aim: The current study aimed to prospectively examine the capacity, insight, and SOI in psychiatric in-patients in a tertiary level psychiatric center. Materials and Methods: A prospective observational study design was used to assess patient’s capacity for making mental healthcare and treatment decisions, insight and SOI using the guidance document, clinical grading of insight and brief psychiatric rating scale (BPRS), respectively. In-patients aged 18 years and above, any gender and any psychiatric diagnosis as per ICD-11 diagnostic criteria were included, and intellectual developmental disorder was excluded. All assessments were conducted at the time of admission (baseline) and repeated every week until discharge. Results: Of 233 in-patients studied, 75% (n = 175) had incapacity and 80% (n = 187) had absent insight at the baseline. Incapacity at baseline was noted in those with delirium, catatonia, BPRS >31 (88%), absent insight (92.6%), and psychotic symptoms (94%). Only 6.42% (n = 12) of cases with the absent insight at baseline had preserved capacity. On repeated measures analysis, those with substance use disorders (SUDs; ≤1 week) and mood disorders regained capacity earlier (1–3 weeks) than psychotic disorders (>3 weeks; P < 0.001). Conclusion: Insight appears to be the best discriminator for capacity status for psychotic disorders, bipolar disorders, and SUDs. Presence of delirium, catatonia, and intoxication reflect obvious lack of capacity; while absent insight, BPRS >31, psychotic and bipolar disorders suggest significant association with incapacity. Effective treatment improves capacity and insight earlier in persons with SUDs and bipolar disorders than psychotic disorders.
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spelling doaj-art-5c30b0a7e0e04f7eaab62f45670bf2172025-08-20T02:11:00ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsIndian Journal of Psychiatry0019-55451998-37942025-04-0167438239010.4103/indianjpsychiatry.indianjpsychiatry_977_24Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective studyN AmanSwapna A. PandurangiPratibha R. KulkarniRanganath R. KulkarniBackground: Capacity is a dynamic, task-specific, time-specific clinical construct that may be impaired either temporarily or permanently due to the medical or psychiatric illness, necessitating varying degrees of support from caregivers. There is paucity of Indian prospective studies focusing on the mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness (SOI) in psychiatric in-patients. Aim: The current study aimed to prospectively examine the capacity, insight, and SOI in psychiatric in-patients in a tertiary level psychiatric center. Materials and Methods: A prospective observational study design was used to assess patient’s capacity for making mental healthcare and treatment decisions, insight and SOI using the guidance document, clinical grading of insight and brief psychiatric rating scale (BPRS), respectively. In-patients aged 18 years and above, any gender and any psychiatric diagnosis as per ICD-11 diagnostic criteria were included, and intellectual developmental disorder was excluded. All assessments were conducted at the time of admission (baseline) and repeated every week until discharge. Results: Of 233 in-patients studied, 75% (n = 175) had incapacity and 80% (n = 187) had absent insight at the baseline. Incapacity at baseline was noted in those with delirium, catatonia, BPRS >31 (88%), absent insight (92.6%), and psychotic symptoms (94%). Only 6.42% (n = 12) of cases with the absent insight at baseline had preserved capacity. On repeated measures analysis, those with substance use disorders (SUDs; ≤1 week) and mood disorders regained capacity earlier (1–3 weeks) than psychotic disorders (>3 weeks; P < 0.001). Conclusion: Insight appears to be the best discriminator for capacity status for psychotic disorders, bipolar disorders, and SUDs. Presence of delirium, catatonia, and intoxication reflect obvious lack of capacity; while absent insight, BPRS >31, psychotic and bipolar disorders suggest significant association with incapacity. Effective treatment improves capacity and insight earlier in persons with SUDs and bipolar disorders than psychotic disorders.https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/indianjpsychiatry.indianjpsychiatry_977_24autonomycapacity assessmentinsightmental capacitymental healthcare act 2017psychiatric disordersseverity of illness
spellingShingle N Aman
Swapna A. Pandurangi
Pratibha R. Kulkarni
Ranganath R. Kulkarni
Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective study
Indian Journal of Psychiatry
autonomy
capacity assessment
insight
mental capacity
mental healthcare act 2017
psychiatric disorders
severity of illness
title Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective study
title_full Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective study
title_fullStr Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective study
title_full_unstemmed Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective study
title_short Mental capacity, insight, and severity of illness in psychiatric in-patients: A prospective study
title_sort mental capacity insight and severity of illness in psychiatric in patients a prospective study
topic autonomy
capacity assessment
insight
mental capacity
mental healthcare act 2017
psychiatric disorders
severity of illness
url https://journals.lww.com/10.4103/indianjpsychiatry.indianjpsychiatry_977_24
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AT pratibharkulkarni mentalcapacityinsightandseverityofillnessinpsychiatricinpatientsaprospectivestudy
AT ranganathrkulkarni mentalcapacityinsightandseverityofillnessinpsychiatricinpatientsaprospectivestudy