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  4. Concurrent Validity and Reliability of Suicide Risk Assessment Instruments: A Meta-Analysis of 20 Instruments Across 27 International Cohorts
 
research article

Concurrent Validity and Reliability of Suicide Risk Assessment Instruments: A Meta-Analysis of 20 Instruments Across 27 International Cohorts

Campos, Adrian I.
•
Van Velzen, Laura S.
•
Veltman, Dick J.
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March 1, 2023
Neuropsychology

Objective: A major limitation of current suicide research is the lack of power to identify robust correlates of suicidal thoughts or behavior. Variation in suicide risk assessment instruments used across cohorts may represent a limitation to pooling data in international consortia. Method: Here, we examine this issue through two approaches: (a) an extensive literature search on the reliability and concurrent validity of the most commonly used instruments and (b) by pooling data (N similar to 6,000 participants) from cohorts from the Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics Through Meta-Analysis (ENIGMA) Major Depressive Disorder and ENIGMA-Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviour working groups, to assess the concurrent validity of instruments currently used for assessing suicidal thoughts or behavior. Results: We observed moderate-to-high correlations between measures, consistent with the wide range (? range: 0.15-0.97; r range: 0.21-0.94) reported in the literature. Two common multi-item instruments, the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale and the Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation were highly correlated with each other (r = 0.83). Sensitivity analyses identified sources of heterogeneity such as the time frame of the instrument and whether it relies on self-report or a clinical interview. Finally, construct-specific analyses suggest that suicide ideation items from common psychiatric questionnaires are most concordant with the suicide ideation construct of multi-item instruments. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that multi-item instruments provide valuable information on different aspects of suicidal thoughts or behavior but share a modest core factor with single suicidal ideation items. Retrospective, multisite collaborations including distinct instruments should be feasible provided they harmonize across instruments or focus on specific constructs of suicidality.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1037/neu0000850
Web of Science ID

WOS:001011350400008

Author(s)
Campos, Adrian I.
Van Velzen, Laura S.
Veltman, Dick J.
Pozzi, Elena
Ambrogi, Sonia
Ballard, Elizabeth D.
Banaj, Nerisa
Basgoeze, Zeynep
Bellow, Sophie
Benedetti, Francesco
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Date Issued

2023-03-01

Published in
Neuropsychology
Volume

37

Issue

3

Start page

315

End page

329

Subjects

Psychology, Clinical

•

Neurosciences

•

Psychology

•

Psychology

•

Neurosciences & Neurology

•

suicide

•

concurrent validity

•

harmonization

•

psychometrics

•

instruments

•

rating-scale

•

depression

•

interview

•

ideation

•

anxiety

•

inventory

•

severity

•

children

•

version

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

Available on Infoscience
September 11, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/200637
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