Appraisals of disability and psychological adjustment in veterans with spinal cord injuries.
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2020
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Abstract
Following a spinal cord injury or disability (SCI/D), cognitive appraisals are a marker of psychological adjustment. The present study evaluated the clinical utility and discriminant validity of the Appraisals of DisAbility Primary and Secondary ScaleΒ - Short Form (ADAPSS-sf). The ADAPSS-sf was evaluated on 1. identification of individuals experiencing poor psychological adjustment and 2. prediction of life satisfaction beyond measures of emotional distress. A retrospective study was completed using ROC analyses and odds ratios to identify the clinical utility of the ADAPSS-sf. In addition, blocked hierarchical regression explored the ADAPSS-sf predictive characteristics for satisfaction with life beyond measures of emotional distress. Veteran's Health Administration SCI Center. Ninety outpatient veterans with SCI/Ds. Measures of psychological adjustment post-SCI/D included the PHQ-9, GAD-7, PC-PTSD, and the Diener Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS). The ADAPSS-sf was used as a measure of cognitive appraisals. Results indicated the ADAPSS-sf is effective in identification of poor psychological adjustment, Pβ<β.001. Diagnostic odds ratios and ADAPSS-sf cut scores were selected to prioritize sensitivity (7.17,ββ€β11), specificity (68.25,ββ₯β22), or a balance of the two (16.32,ββ€β19). Hierarchical regression indicated the ADAPSS-sf accounted for unique variance in life satisfaction beyond measures of emotional distress, (Ξβ=β.20, β=β-.66, (89)β=β6.54, Pβ<β.001). Results indicated SCI/D specific appraisals are predictive of concurrent poor psychological adjustment and provide insight into satisfaction with life beyond measures of emotional distress.Reference Key |
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Authors | Russell, Matthew;Ames, Herb;Dunn, Callie;Beckwith, Sarah;Holmes, Sally A; |
Journal | the journal of spinal cord medicine |
Year | 2020 |
DOI | 10.1080/10790268.2020.1754650 |
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