The generalizability of Older Adult Self-Report (OASR) syndromes of psychopathology across 20 societies
Fecha
2020-01-29Autor
Portillo Reyes, Veronica
Masha, Ivanova
Achenbach, Thomas
Rescola, Leslie
Turner, Lori
Dumas, Julie
Almeida, Vera
Anafarta-Sendag, Meltem
Bie, Leva
Bolmsma, Dorret
Caldas, Carlos
Capps, John
Chen, Yi-chuen
Colombo, Paola
Oliveira, Margareth
Dobrean, Anca
Erol, Nese
Frigerio, Alessandra
Funabiki, Yasuko
Gedutiene, Reda
Guomundsson, Halldór
Heo, Min
kim, Young
Lee, Tih-shih
Leite, Manuela
Liu, Jianghong
Markovic, Jasminka
Misiec, Monika
Muller, Marcus
Ja Oh, Kyung
Retz, Wolfgang
Sebre, Sandra
Shi, Shupeng
Siguroardottir, Sigurveig
Simulioniene, Roma
Sokoli, Elvisa
Tomasevic, Tanja
Vink, Jaqueline
Zasepa, Ewa
Metadatos
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OBJECTIVES:
As the world population ages, psychiatrists will increasingly need instruments for measuring constructs of psychopathology that are generalizable to diverse elders. The study tested whether syndromes of co-occurring problems derived from self-ratings of psychopathology by US elders would fit self-ratings by elders in 19 other societies.
METHODS/DESIGN:
The Older Adult Self-Report (OASR) was completed by 12 826 adults who were 60 to 102 years old in 19 societies from North and South America, Asia, and Eastern, Northern, Southern, and Western Europe, plus the United States. Individual and multigroup confirmatory factor analyses (CFAs) tested the fit of the seven-syndrome OASR model, consisting of the Anxious/Depressed, Worries, Somatic Complaints, Functional Impairment, Memory/Cognition Problems, Thought Problems, and Irritable/Disinhibited syndromes.
RESULTS:
In individual CFAs, the primary model fit index showed good fit for all societies, while the secondary model fit indices showed acceptable to good fit. The items loaded strongly on their respective factors, with a median item loading of .63 across 20 societies, and 98.7% of the loadings were statistically significant. In multigroup CFAs, 98% of items demonstrated approximate or full metric invariance. Fifteen percent of items demonstrated approximate or full scalar invariance, and another 59% demonstrated scalar invariance across more than half of societies.
CONCLUSIONS:
The findings supported the generalizability of OASR syndromes across societies. The seven syndromes offer empirically based clinical constructs that are relevant for elders of different backgrounds. They can be used to assess diverse elders and as a taxonomic framework to facilitate communication, services, research, and training in geriatric psychiatry.