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Reliability and Validity of the Brief Insomnia Questionnaire in the America Insomnia Survey
Author(s) -
Ronald C. Kessler,
Catherine Coulouvrat,
Goeran Hajak,
Matthew Lakoma,
Thomas Roth,
Nancy A. Sampson,
Victoria Shahly,
Alicia C. Shillington,
Judith J. Stephenson,
James K. Walsh,
Gary Zammit
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
sleep
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.222
H-Index - 207
eISSN - 1550-9109
pISSN - 0161-8105
DOI - 10.1093/sleep/33.5.1539
Subject(s) - insomnia , reliability (semiconductor) , psychology , clinical psychology , validity , psychiatry , psychometrics , physics , quantum mechanics , power (physics)
STUDY OBJECTIVESto evaluate the reliability and validity of the Brief Insomnia Questionnaire (BIQ), a fully structured questionnaire developed to diagnose insomnia according to hierarchy-free Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, Fourth Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV-TR), International Classification of Diseases-10 (ICD-10), and research diagnostic criteria/International Classification of Sleep Disorders-2 (RDC/ICSD-2) general criteria without organic exclusions in the America Insomnia Survey (AIS).DESIGNprobability subsamples of AIS respondents, oversampling BIQ positives, completed short-term test-retest interviews (n = 59) or clinical reappraisal interviews (n = 203) to assess BIQ reliability and validity.SETTINGthe AIS is a large (n = 10,094) epidemiologic survey of the prevalence and correlates of insomnia.PARTICIPANTSadult subscribers to a national managed healthcare plan.INTERVENTIONNoneMEASUREMENTS AND RESULTSBIQ test-retest correlations were 0.47-0.94 for nature of the sleep problems (initiation, maintenance, nonrestorative sleep [NRS]), 0.72-0.95 for problem frequency, 0.66-0.88 for daytime impairment/distress, and 0.62 for duration of sleep. Good individual-level concordance was found between BIQ diagnoses and diagnoses based on expert interviews for meeting hierarchy-free inclusion criteria for diagnoses in any of the diagnostic systems, with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC, a measure of classification accuracy insensitive to disorder prevalence) of 0.86 for dichotomous classifications. The AUC increased to 0.94 when symptom-level data were added to generate continuous predicted-probability of diagnosis measures. The AUC was lower for dichotomous classifications based on RDC/ICSD-2 (0.68) and ICD-10 (0.70) than for DSM-IV-TR (0.83) criteria but increased consistently when symptom-level data were added to generate continuous predicted-probability measures of RDC/ICSD-2, ICD-10, and DSM-IV-TR diagnoses (0.92-0.95).CONCLUSIONSthese results show that the BIQ generates accurate estimates of the prevalence and correlates of hierarchy-free insomnia in the America Insomnia Survey.

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