AI Article Synopsis

  • A study was conducted to re-evaluate the Coping Strategies Questionnaire for Sickle Cell Disease (CSQ-SCD) and its psychological measurement effectiveness among adults with SCD in the U.S., following previous conflicting findings.
  • The research involved online surveys completed by 196 participants, which indicated that a three-factor model (active coping, affective coping, and passive adherence coping) fit the data better than a two-factor model, with some subscale reliability issues identified.
  • Results showed satisfactory internal consistency for active and affective coping factors, but inadequate consistency for passive adherence coping, leading to further exploratory analysis that reinforced the three-factor structure.

Article Abstract

Background: Previous studies have reported conflicting factor structures of the Coping Strategies Questionnaire - Sickle Cell Disease (CSQ-SCD). This study examined the psychometric properties of the CSQ-SCD among adults with SCD in the United States.

Methods: This study implemented a cross-sectional study design with web-based self-administered surveys. Individuals with SCD were recruited via an online panel. Psychometric properties, including factorial and construct validity, and internal consistency reliability, of the CSQ-SCD were assessed.

Results: A total of 196 adults with SCD completed the survey. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), using maximum likelihood estimation and the 13 subscale scores as factor indicators, supported a three-factor model for the CSQ-SCD compared to a two-factor model. Model fit statistics for the three-factor model were: Chi-square [df] = 227.084 [62]; CFI = 0.817; TLI = 0.770; RMSEA [90% CI] = 0.117 [0.101-0.133]; SRMR = 0.096. All standardized factor loadings (except for the subscales isolation, resting, taking fluids, and praying and hoping) were > 0.5 and statistically significant, indicating evidence of convergent validity. Correlations between all subscales (except praying and hoping) were lower than hypothesized; however, model testing revealed that the three latent factors, active coping, affective coping, and passive adherence coping were not perfectly correlated, suggesting discriminant validity. Internal consistency reliabilities for the active coping factor (α = 0.803) and affective coping factor (α = 0.787) were satisfactory, however, reliability was inadequate for the passive adherence coping factor (α = 0.531). Given this overall pattern of results, a follow-up exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was also conducted. The new factor structure extracted by EFA supported a three-factor structure (based on the results of a parallel analysis), wherein the subscale of praying and hoping loaded on the active coping factor.

Conclusions: Overall, the CSQ-SCD was found to have less than adequate psychometric validity in our sample of adults with SCD. These results provide clarification around the conflicting factor structure results reported in the literature and demonstrate a need for the future development of a SCD specific coping instrument.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11034024PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12955-024-02251-0DOI Listing

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