PMID: 3745454Jul 1, 1986Paper

Effects of psychotropic drugs and psychiatric illness on vocational aptitude and interest assessment

Journal of Clinical Psychology
E Helmes, G C Fekken

Abstract

This study examined the vocational aptitude and interest scores of 326 inpatients at a large urban psychiatric hospital. The inpatient group performed significantly below the adult normative mean on eight of nine General Aptitude Test Battery (GATB) aptitude measures; the single exception was Verbal Aptitude. Further, GATB aptitude scores (adjusted for age and education) were significantly lower for patients who were receiving (N = 210) psychotropic medication than for patients who were not receiving (N = 114) psychotropic medication, again with the exception of Verbal Aptitude. Differentiation of patients into subsamples who were receiving particular drugs or drug combinations indicated that phenothiazines in combination with Anti-Parkinsonians were associated with the poorest GATB performances. Interestingly, self-reported vocational interests were not related in any systematic fashion to receiving medication. A variety of explanations that may account for these findings, including drug side-effects and severity or type of psychiatric disorder, were investigated. Implications for vocational counselors were discussed.

References

Feb 1, 1977·Journal of Personality Assessment·S H Getsinger
Apr 1, 1965·Journal of Clinical Psychology·A TELLEGEN

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Citations

Apr 15, 2008·Philosophical Transactions. Series A, Mathematical, Physical, and Engineering Sciences·X H ZhouZ Yang

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