Symptom Agreement Between Patients and Their Peer Caregivers in Prison.
Stephanie Grace ProstEunyoung LeePublished in: Journal of correctional health care : the official journal of the National Commission on Correctional Health Care (2022)
Peer caregivers are incarcerated people who provide adjunct, nonclinical support to other incarcerated people. We described patient-caregiver symptom agreement in prison and correlates of symptom agreement to explore peer caregivers' ability to understand their patients' experience. We found dyads were aligned closely ( N = 52; k = .86; α binary = .86), though patients and peer caregivers often reported no symptoms during the assessment period. Peer caregivers were capable of matching their patients' self-reported symptoms beyond chance alone, though few correlates of patient-caregiver symptom agreement in prison emerged. The role of reverence and social homophily are discussed as potential drivers of symptom agreement. Future examination of caregiver burden or measures that account for both patient and caregiver characteristics are encouraged.