Psychometric properties of the Brief Symptom Inventory support the hypothesis of a general psychopathological factor
Alexandre Luiz de Oliveira Serpa, Danielle Souza Costa, Clarice de Medeiros Chaves Ferreira, Mayra Isabel C. Pinheiro, Alexandre Paim Diaz, Jonas Jardim de Paula, Debora Marques Miranda, Antônio Geraldo da Silva, Leandro Fernandes Malloy-Diniz
Abstract
Introduction
The existence of a general factor related to psychiatric symptoms is supported by studies using a variety of methods in both clinical and non-clinical samples.
Objectives
This study aims to evaluate the replicability of the internal structure of the Brief Symptom Inventory in a large Brazilian sample.
Methods
Participants were 6,427 Brazilian subjects (81% female). Mean age was 42.1 years (standard deviation [SD] = 13.6, Min = 13, Max = 80). All participants completed the online version of the Brief Symptom Inventory. This scale presents a general score (GSI) and nine specific clusters of symptoms (depression, anxiety, phobic anxiety, interpersonal sensibility, psychoticism, paranoid ideation, obsessive-compulsive behavior, hostility, and somatization symptoms).
Results
Confirmatory factor analysis was performed to assess the factor structure of the BSI. The results showed that the best-fitting model was a bifactor solution and the general factor was the main dimension explaining most of the reliable variability in the data.
Conclusion
The findings suggest that the BSI’s internal structure was replicated in a non-clinical sample and that the general factor is the most reliable score. However, it is necessary to better understand the meaning of the general factor scores in a non-clinical sample to increase interpretability of scores.
Keywords
Submitted date:
01/26/2021
Accepted date:
03/15/2021