Deriving a Measure of Social Recovery Capital From the Important People and Activities Instrument: Construction and Psychometric Properties

Author:

Francis Meredith W1,Bourdon Jessica L2,Chan Grace34,Dick Danielle M5,Edenberg Howard J6,Kamarajan Chella7,Kinreich Sivan7,Kramer John4,I-Chun Kuo Sally5ORCID,Pandey Ashwini K7ORCID,Pandey Gayathri7,Smith Rebecca L5,Bucholz Kathleen K8,McCutcheon Vivia V8

Affiliation:

1. Washington University in St. Louis, Brown School of Social Work, St. Louis, MO, USA

2. Wellbridge Addiction Treatment and Research, Center for Addiction Science, Calverton, NY, USA

3. University of Connecticut, Department of Psychiatry, Farmington, CT, USA

4. University of Iowa, Department of Psychiatry, Iowa City, IA, USA

5. Virginia Commonwealth University, Department of Psychology, Richmond, VA, USA

6. Indiana University, Department of Psychiatry, Indianapolis, IN, USA

7. SUNY Downstate Health Sciences University, Department of Psychiatry, Brooklyn, NY, USA

8. Washington University in St. Louis, Department of Psychiatry, St. Louis, MO, USA

Abstract

Abstract Aim This study presents a measure of Social Recovery Capital (SRC) derived from the Important People and Activities instrument (IPA). Methods The sample comprised young adults who participated in the Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism, a high-risk family study of alcohol use disorder (N = 2472). Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis identified influential items and factor structure, adjusting for family relatedness. The final scale was tested for reliability and validity. Results Factor analysis retained 10 items loading on three factors (Network Abstinence Behaviors, Basic Network Structure and Network Importance) that together explained 42% of the variance in SRC. The total model showed adequate fit (Comparative Fit Index = 0.95; Tucker Lewis Index = 0.93; Root Mean Square Error of Approximation = 0.06; Standardized Root Mean Squared Residual = 0.05) and acceptable reliability (α = 0.60; McDonald’s ω = 0.73) and correlated with validation measures mostly in the weak to moderate range. Due to variable factor scores for reliability and validity, we only recommend using the total score. Conclusion The SRC-IPA is a novel measure of SRC derived from the IPA that captures social network data and has applications in research and clinical work. Secondary data analyses using the SRC-IPA in studies that collected the IPA can further demonstrate the interaction of SRC with a wide variety of clinical indicators and demographic characteristics, making it a valuable addition to other measures of SRC.

Funder

NIDA

National Institute on Drug Abuse

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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