Psychometric validation of the Core Self-Evaluations Scale in people with spinal cord injury
Autor: | Jesse B. DeAngelis, Blaise Morrison, Susan Miller Smedema, Holly Aldrich, Rana Yaghmaian |
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Rok vydání: | 2015 |
Předmět: |
Self-assessment
Adult Male 030506 rehabilitation medicine.medical_specialty Self-Assessment Psychometrics medicine.medical_treatment Concurrent validity 050109 social psychology 03 medical and health sciences Diagnostic Self Evaluation Core self-evaluations parasitic diseases medicine Humans 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Disabled Persons Spinal Cord Injuries Demography Self-efficacy Rehabilitation 05 social sciences Middle Aged Confirmatory factor analysis Self Efficacy United States Rehabilitation Research Physical therapy Female 0305 other medical science Psychology Psychosocial |
Zdroj: | Disability and rehabilitation. 38(9) |
ISSN: | 1464-5165 |
Popis: | Core self-evaluations (CSE) are the perceptions that people have about their overall worth and capability. CSE may be a useful global indicator of adaptation to disability and subjective well-being. The Core Self-Evaluations Scale (CSES) is the most common direct measure of CSE, but its use with persons with disabilities has not been validated. This study aims to evaluate the factorial and concurrent validity of the CSES in persons with spinal cord injury.Two hundred forty-seven individuals with spinal cord injury completed an online survey consisting of the CSES, measures of the four CSE traits, and selected psychosocial variables.Confirmatory factor analysis results provide support for the one-factor measurement structure of the CSES. When correlated with selected psychosocial variables, the CSES was found to perform in a similar fashion to an indirect measure of CSE constructed from measures of the individual CSE traits.The CSES demonstrated acceptable psychometric properties, and its use as a brief, cost-effective measure of CSE in rehabilitation research and practice is supported.Core self-evaluations (CSE) are the perceptions that people have about their overall worth and capability, and the construct has promise as a global indicator of adaptation to disability and subjective well-being in rehabilitation research and practice. The Core Self-Evaluations Scale (CSES) is a brief, valuable and cost-effective instrument that can be easily used in both rehabilitation research and practice and has the potential to reduce burden associated with client/participant assessment. This study provided evidence of the factorial and concurrent validity of the CSES in persons with spinal cord injury, and supports its use in rehabilitation settings. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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