Older adult psychopathology: international comparisons of self-reports, collateral reports, and cross-informant agreement
Ver/
Fecha
2020-09-04Autor
Portillo Reyes, Veronica
Leslie A, Rescola
Almeida, Vera
Masha, Ivanova
Achenbach, Thomas
Anafarta-Sendag, Meltem
Bite, Leva
Caldas, Carlos
Capps, John
Chen, Yi-Chuen
Colombo, Paola
da Silva Oliveira, Margareth
Dobrean, Anca
Erol, Nese
Frigerio, Alessandra
Yakuso, Funabiki
Reda, Gedutiene
Halldór, Guðmundsson
Min Quan, Heo
Young, Ah Kim
Tih-Shih, Lee
Manuela, Leite
Jianghong, Liu
Jasminka, Markovic
Misiec, Monica
Müller, Marcus
Oh Ja, Kyung
Wolfgang, Retz
Sebre, Sandra
Shupeng, Shi
Sigurveig, Sigurðardóttir
Sokoli, Elvisa
Dragana, Miliajasevic
Zasępa, Ewa
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemResumen
Objectives: To conduct international comparisons of self-reports, collateral reports, and cross-informant
agreement regarding older adult psychopathology.
Participants: We compared self-ratings of problems (e.g. I cry a lot) and personal strengths (e.g. I like to help
others) for 10,686 adults aged 60–102 years from 19 societies and collateral ratings for 7,065 of these adults from
12 societies.
Measurements: Data were obtained via the Older Adult Self-Report (OASR) and the Older Adult Behavior
Checklist (OABCL; Achenbach et al., 2004)
Results: Cronbach’s alphas were .76 (OASR) and .80 (OABCL) averaged across societies. Across societies,
27 of the 30 problem items with the highest mean ratings and 28 of the 30 items with the lowest mean ratings
were the same on the OASR and the OABCL. Q correlations between the means of the 0–1–2 ratings for the 113
problem items averaged across all pairs of societies yielded means of .77 (OASR) and .78 (OABCL). For the
OASR and OABCL, respectively, analyses of variance (ANOVAs) yielded effect sizes (ESs) for society of 15%
and 18% for Total Problems and 42% and 31% for Personal Strengths, respectively. For 5,584 cross-informant
dyads in 12 societies, cross-informant correlations averaged across societies were .68 for Total Problems and
.58 for Personal Strengths. Mixed-model ANOVAs yielded large effects for society on both Total Problems
(ES = 17%) and Personal Strengths (ES = 36%).
Conclusions: The OASR and OABCL are efficient, low-cost, easily administered mental health assessments that
can be used internationally to screen for many problems and strengths