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Psychometric evaluation of the Amphetamine Cessation Symptom Assessment
Authors:McGregor Catherine  Srisurapanont Manit  Mitchell Amanda  Longo Marie C  Cahill Sharon  White Jason M
Affiliation:

aDrug and Alcohol Office, Perth, Western Australia, Australia

bDepartment of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai, Thailand

cDrug and Alcohol Services, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

dUniversity of Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

Abstract:Testing of a new scale, the Amphetamine Cessation Symptom Assessment (ACSA), in a sample of treatment-seeking amphetamine users (N = 133) showed satisfactory reliability, while factor analysis identified three components explaining 64.7% of the variance in scores. Scores were inversely related to subjective general well-being (r = −.33, p < .01) and directly related to the Beck Depression Inventory (r = .59, p < .01). There were positive relationships between the ACSA and measures of amphetamine dependence (r = .36, p < .01) and the intensity of recent amphetamine use (r = .24, p < .01). The ACSA discriminated between “low-dose” and “high-dose” users, indicating discriminant validity. In inpatients (n = 63), ACSA scores declined significantly over time, while higher scores in inpatient treatment dropouts indicated predictive validity. The ACSA showed satisfactory reliability and validity, with a three-factor solution providing the best fit to the data. The ACSA could play an important role in providing clinical outcome data, particularly in outcome evaluation of new treatment protocols.
Keywords:Amphetamine   Withdrawal   Factor   Validity   Reliability
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