FROM:
Spine (Phila Pa 1976) 1998 (Nov 1): 23 (21); 2367-2371
Chris J. Main, PhD; Gordon Waddell, DSc, MD
From the Department of behavioral Medicine,
Hope Hospital, Manchester, England
Waddell et al in 1980 developed a standardized assessment of behavioral responses to examination. The signs were associated with other clinical measures of illness behavior and distress, and are not simply a feature of medicolegal presentations. Despite clear caveats about the interpretation of the signs, they have been misinterpreted and misused both clinically and medico-legally. Behavioral responses to examination provide useful clinical information, but need to be interpreted with care and understanding.
Isolated signs should not be overinterpreted. Multiple signs suggest that the patient does not have a straightforward physical problem, but that psychological factors also need to be considered. Some patients may require both physical management of their physical pathology and more careful management of the psychosocial and behavioral aspects of their illness. Behavioral signs should be understood as responses affected by fear in the context of recovery from injury and the development of chronic incapacity. They offer only a psychological "yellow-flag" and not a complete psychological assessment. Behavioral signs are not on their own a test of credibility or faking.