A general personality and psychopathology evaluation is considered to be crucial part of the multidisciplinary assessment for weight-related problems. The Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) is commonly used to assess general psychopathology in both overweight and obese patients seeking weight-loss treatment. The main purpose of the present research was to investigate the psychometric properties of the brief form of the SCL-90-R (i.e., the SCL-K-9) in a clinical sample (N = 397) of patients seeking weight-loss treatment (i.e., bariatric surgery and a nutritional weight-loss program). The results of the confirmatory factor analysis supported a one-factor solution of the SCL-K-9, with all nine items loading significantly on the common latent factor (lambdas ≥ 0.587). The ordinal α (= 0.91), the inter-item mean indices of correlation (rii = 0.53), and the convergent validity were also satisfactory. A receiver operating characteristic curves procedure showed that both SCL-90-R and SCL-K-9 were able to classify patients with and without significant binge eating pathology according to the Binge Eating Scale (BES) total score. Overall, our results suggest that the SCL-K-9 has adequate psychometric properties and can be applied as a short screening tool to assess general psychopathology in overweight/obese individuals seeking weight-loss treatment and at follow-up interviews when time restraints preclude the use of the full-length form.

Imperatori, C., Bianciardi, E., Niolu, C., Fabbricatore, M., Gentileschi, P., Di Lorenzo, G., et al. (2020). The symptom-checklist-K-9 (SCL-K-9) discriminates between overweight/obese patients with and without significant binge eating pathology: Psychometric properties of an Italian version. NUTRIENTS, 12(3), 674 [10.3390/nu12030674].

The symptom-checklist-K-9 (SCL-K-9) discriminates between overweight/obese patients with and without significant binge eating pathology: Psychometric properties of an Italian version

Bianciardi E.;Niolu C.;Gentileschi P.;Di Lorenzo G.;Siracusano A.;
2020-01-01

Abstract

A general personality and psychopathology evaluation is considered to be crucial part of the multidisciplinary assessment for weight-related problems. The Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R) is commonly used to assess general psychopathology in both overweight and obese patients seeking weight-loss treatment. The main purpose of the present research was to investigate the psychometric properties of the brief form of the SCL-90-R (i.e., the SCL-K-9) in a clinical sample (N = 397) of patients seeking weight-loss treatment (i.e., bariatric surgery and a nutritional weight-loss program). The results of the confirmatory factor analysis supported a one-factor solution of the SCL-K-9, with all nine items loading significantly on the common latent factor (lambdas ≥ 0.587). The ordinal α (= 0.91), the inter-item mean indices of correlation (rii = 0.53), and the convergent validity were also satisfactory. A receiver operating characteristic curves procedure showed that both SCL-90-R and SCL-K-9 were able to classify patients with and without significant binge eating pathology according to the Binge Eating Scale (BES) total score. Overall, our results suggest that the SCL-K-9 has adequate psychometric properties and can be applied as a short screening tool to assess general psychopathology in overweight/obese individuals seeking weight-loss treatment and at follow-up interviews when time restraints preclude the use of the full-length form.
2020
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Settore MED/18 - CHIRURGIA GENERALE
Settore MED/25 - PSICHIATRIA
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
SCL-K-9; bariatric surgery candidates; binge eating; obesity; overweight; psychopathology
Imperatori, C., Bianciardi, E., Niolu, C., Fabbricatore, M., Gentileschi, P., Di Lorenzo, G., et al. (2020). The symptom-checklist-K-9 (SCL-K-9) discriminates between overweight/obese patients with and without significant binge eating pathology: Psychometric properties of an Italian version. NUTRIENTS, 12(3), 674 [10.3390/nu12030674].
Imperatori, C; Bianciardi, E; Niolu, C; Fabbricatore, M; Gentileschi, P; Di Lorenzo, G; Siracusano, A; Innamorati, M
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/243145
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