ASSESSING TREATMENT OUTCOME II, The Prediction of Rehospitalization

Abstract
Many of the previous studies of rehospitalization are surveyed and those findings are abstracted that are relevant to three basic methodological issues: the selection of predictor content, the source of predictor information, and the length of the follow-up interval. An empirical examination is made of several questions surrounding each issue, including the relative predictive power of a) patients' background characteristics vs. their behavior; b) symptomatic behavior vs. instrumental role behavior; c) patients' own reports vs. others' reports; d) hospital behavior vs. community behavior; and e) each domain of predictor content at a 6-month vs. a 1-year follow-up interval. Finally, individual predictors are selected from each domain to produce a composite picture of the person who is at high risk for rehospitalization.