Assessment of the revised Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scales among adolescents and adults with severe mental illness.


Journal

Psychiatry research
ISSN: 1872-7123
Titre abrégé: Psychiatry Res
Pays: Ireland
ID NLM: 7911385

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
09 2019
Historique:
received: 12 01 2019
revised: 05 04 2019
accepted: 05 04 2019
pubmed: 13 4 2019
medline: 31 3 2020
entrez: 13 4 2019
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

The Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS) comprising 36 items has been widely used across age, gender, psychopathology, language, and culture. Recently several alternative abridged forms have been introduced, namely, the DERS-16 (Bjureberg et al. 2016), the DERS-SF (Kaufman et al. 2016), and the DERS-18 (Victor and Klonsky, 2016), each composed of 16 or 18 items, to provide researchers and clinicians with a shorter measure of emotion dysregulation. However, no study to date has directly compared the psychometrics of these alternative forms. In the present study, using confirmatory factor analysis we first examined the factor structure of the four models of the DERS in two inpatient samples of 636 adolescents in the age-range of 12-17 years (M = 15.33, SD = 1.43), and 1807 adults in the age-range of 18-76 years (M = 34.86, SD = 14.63) with severe mental illness. Next, measurement invariance was tested comparing the two age groups across the four models of DERS. Only the DERS-SF established metric and scalar measurement invariance. Findings suggest that the factor structure of the original and the abridged models of DERS have acceptable fit, however only DERS-SF had equivalence of factor loadings and item intercepts across adolescents and adults.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30975439
pii: S0165-1781(19)30178-7
doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2019.04.010
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

278-283

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2019 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Ruby Charak (R)

Department of Psychological Science, The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, TX, United States. Electronic address: ruby.charak@utrgv.edu.

Brianna M Byllesby (BM)

Summa Health Traumatic Stress Center, OH, United States.

J Christopher Fowler (JC)

Houston Methodist Behavioral Health, and The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, TX, United States.

Carla Sharp (C)

Department of Psychology, The University of Houston, TX, United States.

Jon D Elhai (JD)

Department of Psychology, and Department of Psychiatry, University of Toledo, OH, United States.

B Christopher Frueh (BC)

Department of Psychology, University of Hawaii, HI, United States.

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