The Psychometric Properties of the Colorado Symptom Index

Roger A. Boothroyd, Huey Jen Chen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Colorado Symptom Index (CSI: Shern et al. 1994, Milbank Quart 72:123–148) is widely used in research as a self-report measure of psychiatric symptomatology, yet little information exists regarding the scale’s psychometric properties. Additionally, the CSI has no cut-off score denoting the need for further psychiatric assessment. This study examined the CSI’s psychometric properties and established a cut-off score. Analyses were based on 3,874 adult Florida Medicaid respondents. The CSI had excellent internal consistency (.92) and test-retest reliability (.71). Evidence of the CSI’s validity was strong; CSI scores distinguished among individuals with and without mental health services needs and were significantly correlated with functioning. Results using a contrasting groups approach indicate that 30 is a reasonable “clinical” cut-off score. At this score, the CSI had respectable sensitivity (.76) and specificity (.68) and a ROC curve analysis suggests that the CSI is “fair to good” discriminator of individuals with psychiatric disabilities

Original languageAmerican English
JournalAdministration and Policy in Mental Health and Mental Health Services Research
Volume35
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 1 2008

Keywords

  • Colorado Symptom Index
  • Psychiatric symptomatology
  • Psychometric
  • Reliability
  • Validity

Disciplines

  • Health Law and Policy
  • Law
  • Medicine and Health Sciences
  • Mental and Social Health
  • Psychiatric and Mental Health

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