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Development and Psychometric Examination of a Short-Form Dementia Attitudes Scale
Author(s) -
Alexandria R. Ebert,
Jenessa Steele,
Julie Hicks Patrick
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
innovation in aging
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2399-5300
DOI - 10.1093/geroni/igaa057.908
Subject(s) - dementia , psychology , confirmatory factor analysis , scale (ratio) , context (archaeology) , clinical psychology , personality , quality of life (healthcare) , psychometrics , gerontology , developmental psychology , structural equation modeling , medicine , social psychology , statistics , mathematics , paleontology , physics , disease , pathology , quantum mechanics , psychotherapist , biology
With the increase in research related to people directly and indirectly affected by Alzheimer’s Dementia and related disorders (ADRD), there is a need for short, psychometrically-sound instruments to assess the variety of influences on the quality of life for the person with dementia (pwd) and their care partners. We sought to develop and assess a short version of the Dementia Attitudes Scale (DAS; O’Connor & McFadden, 2010) for use in such endeavors. Using a sample of 321 adults (Mage = 39.7, range 20 to 70 yrs; 47% female), we surveyed a host of individual characteristics (e.g., age, personality, experience with pwd) and several current measures of attitudes about pwd. Ten days later, 162 of these adults completed a retest of the DAS. Results of a confirmatory factor analysis supported the 2-factor solution reported by O’Connor and McFadden. Internal consistency was acceptable for the Comfort factor (Time 1alpha = .83; T2 alpha = .82) and for the Knowledge factor (Time 1 alpha = .86; Time 2 alpha = .87). These estimates are similar to those in the original report. Due to limitations of coefficient alpha we also used structural equations to examine the regression weights for each item as a function of chronological age and experience. These analyses showed that the factor structure was robust when considering these individual characteristics. Finally, we compared different scale lengths using a series of ROC curves. We discuss our results in the context of providing brief and psychometrically-sound measures for use in large survey studies.

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