Elsevier

Psychiatry Research

Volume 225, Issue 3, 28 February 2015, Pages 368-373
Psychiatry Research

Longitudinal measurement invariance of the Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2014.11.075Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • The present study is the first to examine longitudinal measurement invariance of the Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation.

  • All fit indices indicated that both the 19-item questionnaire and the five-item screener were measurement invariant over time.

  • Changes in test-scores on the Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation over time can be attributed to true changes in the construct of interest.

  • These findings legitimate the use of the 19 item scale and the five-item screener in longitudinal assessments.

Abstract

In mental health care, both clinical and scientific decisions are based on within-subject comparisons of test scores on the same self-report questionnaire at different points in time. To establish the validity of test score comparisons over time, longitudinal measurement invariance should be established. The current study tested whether the 19 item Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation (BSS) is measurement invariant (MI) over time. As the first five items of the scale are often used to screen for the presence of suicidal thoughts, we also tested a model consisting of only the first five items. Psychiatric in- and out-patients (n=475) completed the questionnaire upon admission and after 3 months. By means of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) we tested whether the parameters of a single factor model were equal over time. All fit indices indicated that both the 19-item questionnaire and the five-item screener were measurement invariant over time. This means that changes in test-scores over time can be attributed to true changes in the construct of interest. These findings legitimate the use of the 19 item scale and the five-item screener in longitudinal assessments.

Abbreviations

MI
measurement invariance
CFA
confirmatory factor analysis
BSS
Beck Scale for Suicide ideation
CFI
comparative fit index
RMSEA
root mean square error of approximation
CI
confidence interval
ROM
routine outcome monitoring
PITSTOP suicide
professionals in training to STOP suicide
d.f.
degrees of freedom

Keywords

Suicide ideation
Measurement invariance
Response shift
Response bias
Screener

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