Examining cognitive disengagement syndrome in a psychiatric outpatient sample: Psychometric support and associations with internalizing symptoms and sleep problems

Author:

Yucens Bengu1ORCID,Basay Omer2ORCID,Buber Ahmet2ORCID,Tumkaya Selim1ORCID,Kabukcu Basay Burge2ORCID,Erdem Busra1ORCID,Becker Stephen P.34ORCID,Leonard Burns G.5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine Pamukkale University Denizli Turkey

2. Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine Pamukkale University Denizli Turkey

3. Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center Division of Behavioral Medicine and Clinical Psychology Cincinnati Ohio USA

4. Department of Pediatrics University of Cincinnati College of Medicine Cincinnati Ohio USA

5. Department of Psychology Washington State University Pullman Washington USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveThe internal (structural) and external validity of a self‐report measure of cognitive disengagement syndrome (CDS, formerly sluggish cognitive tempo) relative to a self‐report measure of attention‐deficit/hyperactivity disorder‐inattention (ADHD‐IN) was evaluated with adults from university outpatient psychiatric clinics in Turkey.MethodsA total of 274 outpatients (75.9% women; ages 18–64 years; Mage = 31.06; SDage = 10.84; 50.4% anxiety disorders; 41.6% depressive disorders; 2.9% ADHD; 1.5% sleep disorders; 0.7% eating disorders; 2.9% no mental disorder) completed self‐report measures of CDS, ADHD‐IN, ADHD‐hyperactivity/impulsivity (HI), sleep problems, depression, and stress.ResultsAll 15 CDS symptoms measured by the Adult Concentration Inventory (ACI) showed convergent (moderate to high loadings on the CDS factor) and discriminant (loading close to zero on the ADHD‐IN factor) validity. CDS also showed stronger first‐order and unique associations than ADHD‐IN with sleep problems, depression, anxiety, and stress, whereas ADHD‐IN showed stronger first‐order and unique associations than CDS with ADHD‐HI.ConclusionThis is the first study to provide support for the scores from this 15 item self‐report measure of CDS by the ACI in a clinical sample of adults, with findings consistent with previous studies examining parent and teacher rating scale measures with the same 15 CDS symptoms. These findings provide additional support for usefulness of these 15 CDS symptoms as measured by the ACI to study CDS across various cultures.

Publisher

Wiley

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