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The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties

Nicola Gray Orcid Logo, Robert J. Snowden Orcid Logo, Olivia Tiley, Nicola Gray

Health Science Reports, Volume: 6, Issue: 1

Swansea University Authors: Nicola Gray Orcid Logo, Nicola Gray

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DOI (Published version): 10.1002/hsr2.1028

Abstract

Background and AimsThe Cardiff Self-Injury Inventory (CSII) is a short (1 min), relatively nonintrusive, measure of previous self-injury behaviors written in English. It measures self-injury with suicidal intent and without such intent, covers actions versus thoughts, and has two time periods (lifet...

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Published in: Health Science Reports
ISSN: 2398-8835 2398-8835
Published: Wiley 2023
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa62647
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spelling 2023-03-06T12:38:00.2220608 v2 62647 2023-02-10 The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties d3dfb6fa4b6e057dd587f5e9f28a581f 0000-0003-3849-8118 Nicola Gray Nicola Gray true false 3dbefb08e7a2efb1ded7f79160b70a64 Nicola Gray Nicola Gray true false 2023-02-10 HPS Background and AimsThe Cardiff Self-Injury Inventory (CSII) is a short (1 min), relatively nonintrusive, measure of previous self-injury behaviors written in English. It measures self-injury with suicidal intent and without such intent, covers actions versus thoughts, and has two time periods (lifetime vs recent [defined as the last 3 months]). The study aimed to examine its psychometric properties and its relationship to more well-established measures.MethodsA UK community sample of 184 participants completed the CSII and two other measures of self-harming (Deliberate Self-Harm Inventory [DSHI] and Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire–Revised [SBQ-R]) in March 2020–May 2020. Fifty participants also repeated these measurements 1–2 weeks later.ResultsThe CSII showed strong psychometric properties with internal reliability of 0.87 and a test–retest of 0.82. The subscales also showed strong psychometric properties. The CSII showed strong concurrent validity to the other measures of self-injury (SBQ-R, r = 0.70; DSHI, r = 0.81). A factor analysis supported the idea that there are two distinct components to the overall CSII score arising due to the distinction between suicidal and nonsuicidal behaviors.ConclusionThe CSII has good psychometric properties in this population and can be used as a fast, nonintrusive, measure of different self-injurious behaviors for clinical or research purposes. Journal Article Health Science Reports 6 1 Wiley 2398-8835 2398-8835 deliberate self-harm; nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI); suicide 1 1 2023 2023-01-01 10.1002/hsr2.1028 COLLEGE NANME Psychology COLLEGE CODE HPS Swansea University 2023-03-06T12:38:00.2220608 2023-02-10T14:10:42.7474168 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Nicola Gray 0000-0003-3849-8118 1 Robert J. Snowden 0000-0001-9900-480x 2 Olivia Tiley 3 Nicola Gray 4 62647__26757__050f50c27b474464b08d39330e34ee8e.pdf 62647_VoR.pdf 2023-03-06T12:36:46.9546668 Output 673714 application/pdf Version of Record true © 2022 The Authors. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License true eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
title The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties
spellingShingle The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties
Nicola Gray
Nicola Gray
title_short The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties
title_full The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties
title_fullStr The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties
title_full_unstemmed The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties
title_sort The Cardiff Self‐Injury Inventory (English version): Convergent validity and psychometric properties
author_id_str_mv d3dfb6fa4b6e057dd587f5e9f28a581f
3dbefb08e7a2efb1ded7f79160b70a64
author_id_fullname_str_mv d3dfb6fa4b6e057dd587f5e9f28a581f_***_Nicola Gray
3dbefb08e7a2efb1ded7f79160b70a64_***_Nicola Gray
author Nicola Gray
Nicola Gray
author2 Nicola Gray
Robert J. Snowden
Olivia Tiley
Nicola Gray
format Journal article
container_title Health Science Reports
container_volume 6
container_issue 1
publishDate 2023
institution Swansea University
issn 2398-8835
2398-8835
doi_str_mv 10.1002/hsr2.1028
publisher Wiley
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology
document_store_str 1
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description Background and AimsThe Cardiff Self-Injury Inventory (CSII) is a short (1 min), relatively nonintrusive, measure of previous self-injury behaviors written in English. It measures self-injury with suicidal intent and without such intent, covers actions versus thoughts, and has two time periods (lifetime vs recent [defined as the last 3 months]). The study aimed to examine its psychometric properties and its relationship to more well-established measures.MethodsA UK community sample of 184 participants completed the CSII and two other measures of self-harming (Deliberate Self-Harm Inventory [DSHI] and Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire–Revised [SBQ-R]) in March 2020–May 2020. Fifty participants also repeated these measurements 1–2 weeks later.ResultsThe CSII showed strong psychometric properties with internal reliability of 0.87 and a test–retest of 0.82. The subscales also showed strong psychometric properties. The CSII showed strong concurrent validity to the other measures of self-injury (SBQ-R, r = 0.70; DSHI, r = 0.81). A factor analysis supported the idea that there are two distinct components to the overall CSII score arising due to the distinction between suicidal and nonsuicidal behaviors.ConclusionThe CSII has good psychometric properties in this population and can be used as a fast, nonintrusive, measure of different self-injurious behaviors for clinical or research purposes.
published_date 2023-01-01T04:22:26Z
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