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Psychometric properties of the SUNYA revision of the psychosomatic symptom checklist
Authors:Virginia Attanasio  Frank Andrasik  Edward B. Blanchard  John G. Arena
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychology, State University of New York at Albany, 12222 Albany, New York;(2) Center for Stress and Anxiety Disorders, Department of Psychology, Draper 107, State University of New York at Albany, 135 Western Avenue, 12222 Albany, New York
Abstract:The Psychosomatic Symptom Checklist (PSC), a questionnaire assessing psychosomatic symptoms, was administered to two separate samples of college students. For Sample 1 (N=698),the questionnaire was readministered to three separate subsets at intervals of either 1 week (N=143),4 weeks (N=74),or 8 weeks (N=48).Each subset of subjects recompleted the PSC on only one of the three retest intervals. Based on the initial administration an analysis of the normative data revealed a mean total score of 23.7, suggesting a relatively low degree of psychosomatic symptoms in this group. Although total scores decreased slightly over time, test-retest correlations remained high (r>0.80, P<0.0001).Individual item correlations varied and also decreased across time; however, the majority of correlations was greater than r=0.50 throughout. Sample 2 (N=249)completed the PSC, Beck Depression Inventory (BDI), State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-X), and Rathus Assertiveness Scale (RAS), and intercorrelations were computed between these measures. This analysis revealed little overlap between the psychosomatic complaints assessed by the PSC and other commonly used measures of psychological distress. Finally, a factor analysis revealed one major factor on which all but 2 of the 17 questionnaire items loaded significantly. These results suggest that the PSC is sensitive to psychosomatic distress and remains reliable over time.This reaserch was supported in part by Grants NS-15235 and NS-16891 from NINCDS.
Keywords:college students  checklist  psychosomatic complaints
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