Development of a Brief Version of the Dissociative Symptoms Scale and the Reliability and Validity of DSS-B Scores in Diverse Clinical and Community Samples

Author:

Macia Kathryn S.12ORCID,Carlson Eve B.12,Palmieri Patrick A.3,Smith Steven R.4,Anglin Deidre M.5ORCID,Ghosh Ippen Chandra6,Lieberman Alicia F.6,Wong Eunice C.7,Schell Terry L.7,Waelde Lynn C.28

Affiliation:

1. National Center for PTSD, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Menlo Park, CA, USA

2. Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, CA, USA

3. Summa Health, Akron, OH, USA

4. University of California, Santa Barbara, USA

5. The City College of New York, New York City, USA

6. University of California, San Francisco, USA

7. RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, USA

8. Palo Alto University, CA, USA

Abstract

The Dissociative Symptoms Scale (DSS) was developed to assess moderately severe types of dissociation (depersonalization, derealization, gaps in awareness and memory, and dissociative reexperiencing) that would be relevant to a range of clinical populations, including those experiencing trauma-related dissociation. The current study used data from 10 ethnically and racially diverse clinical and community samples ( N = 3,879) to develop a brief version of the DSS (DSS-B). Item information curves were examined to identify items with the most precision in measuring above average levels of the latent trait within each subscale. Analyses revealed that the DSS-B preserved the factor structure and content domains of the full scale, and its scores had strong reliability and validity that were comparable to those of scores on the full measure. DSS-B scores showed high levels of measurement invariance across ethnoracial groups. Results indicate that DSS-B scores are reliable and valid in the populations studied.

Funder

national institute on minority health and health disparities

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Applied Psychology,Clinical Psychology

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