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Original Articles

Psychological Profiles Distinguishing Litigating and Nonlitigating Pain Patients: Subtle, and Not So Subtle

Pages 299-313 | Published online: 10 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

Chronic pain patients in the midst of litigation over settlement for their injuries were examined as a naturally occurring group where one might expect various distortions or differences in test findings on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality inventory-Revised (MMPI-2). Similar groups of 43 chronic pain patients in litigation and 45 not in litigation were examined on 10 key MMPI-2 variable selected a priori Multivariate analysis of variance revealed a significant difference between groups (p = .036). Litigators were most distinct in endorsing more obvious and fewer subtle symptoms. A conversion profile was also more salient for litigators once the obvious versus subtle differences were taken into account, Implications for use of the MMPI-2 and for clinical work with litigious patients are examined.

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