Publication | Open Access
The self-report Drug Use Disorders Identification Test—Extended (DUDIT-E): Reliability, validity, and motivational index
119
Citations
20
References
2006
Year
Substance UsePsychopathologyDrug ScreeningMental HealthDrug TreatmentSubstance Use DisordersPsychologySubstance Use TreatmentClinical PsychologyDrug TestAddiction MedicineConstruct ValidityHealth SciencesBehavioral SciencesPsychiatryAddiction TreatmentMale Prison InmatesSubstance AbuseAddictionDrug TestingMotivational IndexSubstance AddictionMedicineDrug Use
Among clients who have been screened already for drug-related problems, the Drug Use Disorders Identification Test--Extended (DUDIT-E) maps the frequency of illicit drug use (D), the positive (P) and negative (N) aspects of drug use, and treatment readiness (T). D scores correlated with Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition diagnoses among 154 heavy drug users from criminal justice and drug detoxification settings, as well as with urine test results in drug detoxification units. One-week test/retest intraclass correlation coefficients among 92 male prison inmates were .90, .78, .75, and .84 for D, P, N, and T scores, respectively. Cronbach's alpha were .88-.95 for P score, .88-.93 for N score, and .72-.81 for T score. Principal components analysis supported construct validity for P, N, and T scores. T scores were higher in prison treatment units than in motivational and regular units without treatment emphasis. Motivational index scores differentiated between three categories of heavy drug users; they did not differentiate between prisons and unit types, but this corresponded to unclear structural differentiation between units.
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