Factorial Structure, Internal Consistency, and Measurement Invariance of a Self-Report Scale for Assessing Mental Health Problems in Adults

Background: In Latin America, there is a lack of brief, valid, and culturally appropriate instruments for assessing adult mental health, which may hinder early detection and primary access to interventions. Objective: This aim of this study was to adapt and validate a self-report scale for adults de...

Полное описание

Сохранить в:
Библиографические подробности
Главный автор: Costa-Ball, César Daniel (author)
Другие авторы: Fernández, María Eugenía (author), Lorenzo-Seva, Urbano (author), Daset, Lilian (author)
Формат: article
Язык:испанский
английский
Опубликовано: 2025
Предметы:
Online-ссылка:https://revistas.ucu.edu.uy/index.php/cienciaspsicologicas/article/view/4686
https://hdl.handle.net/10895/5713
Метки: Добавить метку
Нет меток, Требуется 1-ая метка записи!
Описание
Итог:Background: In Latin America, there is a lack of brief, valid, and culturally appropriate instruments for assessing adult mental health, which may hinder early detection and primary access to interventions. Objective: This aim of this study was to adapt and validate a self-report scale for adults derived from the Adolescent Self-Report (ADA), designed to assess psychopathological symptoms and personal strengths. Method: A total of 9,885 Uruguayan adults (M = 41.5 years; 62.7% women) participated by completing the abbreviated version of the instrument, the ADAL (Adult version of the ADA), along with the Personal Wellbeing Index (PWI-A). Confirmatory factor analyses, reliability assessments, measurement invariance tests by gender, age, and socioeconomic status, and correlational analyses with wellbeing and sociodemographic variables were conducted. Results: The six-factor model showed good fit (CFI = .951, TLI = .944, RMSEA = .031) and adequate reliability (ordinal α = .71–.90). Configural, metric, and scalar invariance were confirmed across gender, age, and socioeconomic groups. Correlations with wellbeing provided evidence of validity based on relations with external variables. Conclusions: The ADAL is a brief, valid, and reliable instrument for assessing adult mental health, with potential applications in clinical, community, and research settings within Spanish-speaking populations.