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Reliability and validity of a brief instrument for assessing post‐traumatic stress disorder
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1993
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesPsychopathologyPsychiatric EvaluationEducationPsychometricsMental HealthClassical Test TheoryPsychologySocial SciencesTrauma (Addiction Psychology)Psychometric PropertiesClinical PsychologyComorbid Psychiatric DisorderPtsd SymptomsPtsd Sympton ScaleBrief InstrumentStress ManagementPsychiatrySexual ViolenceSocial StressPost‐traumatic Stress DisorderSexual AssaultSexual AbusePsychotherapyPsychological MeasurementPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
The PTSD Symptom Scale (PSS) comprises 17 items that diagnose PTSD per DSM‑III‑R and assess symptom severity. The study evaluates the psychometric properties of the interview and self‑report versions of the PSS. Both versions were administered via interview and self‑report to 118 recent rape and non‑sexual assault victims. Both versions showed satisfactory internal consistency, high test‑retest reliability, and good concurrent validity; the interview version had high inter‑rater agreement and excellent convergent validity with the SCID, while the self‑report version was somewhat more conservative in diagnosing PTSD.
Abstract This study examines the psychometric properties of two versions of the PTSD Sympton Scale (PSS). The scale contains 17 items that diagnose PTSD according to DSM‐III‐R criteria and assess the severity of PTSD symptoms. An interview and self‐report version of the PSS were administered to a sample of 118 recent rape and non‐sexual assault victims. The results indicate that both versions of the PSS have satisfactory internal consistency, high test‐retest reliability, and good concurrent validity. The interview version yielded high interrater agreement when administred separately by two interviewers and excellent convergent validity with the SCID. When used to diagnose PTSD, the self‐report version of the PSS was somewhat more conservative than the interview version.
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