Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments Peer reviewed

Discrepancies between patient-reported and physician-reported severity and disability in functional and non-functional movement disorders

Olof CB Vermeulen, Tjerk J. Lagrand, Jeannette Gelauff, Marjolein Brusse‐Keizer and 2 more

Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry | Jun 2, 2026

Abstract

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Functional movement disorder (FMD) is a common cause of debilitating symptoms in neurology patients. Due to the stigma that is associated with FMD, it is possible that discrepancies between patient and physician judgements of severity and disability are more pronounced in FMD compared with non-FMD. A patient-physician discrepancy in judgement may be explained by associated comorbid non-motor symptoms. METHODS: In the prospective TASMAN study, 171 FMD and 294 non-FMD patients were recruited from the Netherlands and Australia. Patient characteristics included non-motor symptoms: depression, anxiety, dissociation, pain and fatigue. Patient-reported and physician-reported severity and disability were collected using seven-point Likert scales. A quantitative measure of discrepancies was calculated by subtracting the physician's score from the patient's score. Associations between non-motor symptoms and disability were analysed using linear regression. RESULTS: Patients reported significantly higher severity and disability compared with physicians in both groups. Patient-physician discrepancies in both severity and disability outcomes were not statistically different between FMD and non-FMD. FMD patients scored significantly higher on all non-motor symptoms compared with non-FMD. Patient-reported, but not physician-reported, disability was associated with increased pain and fatigue in both the FMD and non-FMD groups. In FMD, dissociation was associated with disability in both patient-reported and physician-reported outcomes. In non-FMD, depression was associated with disability in both patient-reported and physician-reported outcomes. CONCLUSIONS: Our results do not support notions of ongoing FMD-specific stigmatisation in physicians. Similar patient-physician discrepancies regarding severity and disability exist in both FMD and non-FMD patients. Patient-physician discrepancies in disability in all movement disorder patients might be in part explained by different appreciation of the importance of non-motor symptoms.

Direct answer

What can I do from this paper page?

Use this page to scan "Discrepancies between patient-reported and physician-reported severity and disability in functional and non-functional movement disorders" quickly: start with the summary and abstract, then check the authors, source, topics, and related papers. From here, open Scollr to follow Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments research, save the paper, or map adjacent work.

Authors

Researchers on this paper

Olof CB Vermeulen

first | University Medical Center Groningen | ORCID 0009-0001-6407-2201

Tjerk J. Lagrand

middle | University Medical Center Groningen | ORCID 0000-0002-4967-866X

Jeannette Gelauff

middle | Amsterdam University Medical Centers

Marjolein Brusse‐Keizer

middle | Medisch Spectrum Twente | ORCID 0000-0003-1781-5794

Alexander Lehn

middle | Queensland University of Technology

Marina A J Tijssen

last | University Medical Center Groningen | ORCID 0000-0001-5783-571X

Research areas

Follow related topics

Citation

BibTeX

@article{Vermeulen2026Discrepancies,
  title = {Discrepancies between patient-reported and physician-reported severity and disability in functional and non-functional movement disorders},
  author = {Olof CB Vermeulen and Tjerk J. Lagrand and Jeannette Gelauff and Marjolein Brusse‐Keizer and Alexander Lehn and Marina A J Tijssen},
  journal = {Journal of Neurology Neurosurgery & Psychiatry},
  year = {2026},
  doi = {10.1136/jnnp-2025-336650},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1136/jnnp-2025-336650}
}

FAQ

Using this paper in a discovery workflow

How do I find related work for this paper?

Use the related papers and topic links on this page as starting points. In Scollr, you can also open the paper and build a literature map around its references, citing papers, and related work.

How can I keep up with new Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments research papers?

Follow Psychosomatic Disorders and Their Treatments research in Scollr. New papers from the topic flow into a personalized feed, and you can save useful studies to revisit later.

Can I cite this paper from this page?

This page includes a static BibTeX block for Discrepancies between patient-reported and physician-reported severity and disability in functional and non-functional movement disorders. Always verify the DOI, source, and publication details against the publisher record before submitting a manuscript.

Follow this research in Scollr

Follow the topics and authors behind this paper, save useful studies, and build a literature map when you are ready to go deeper.

Get the app