Validación de la lista de chequeo del trastorno por estrés postraumático (PCL-5) en adolescentes colombianos víctimas de adversidad
Cargando...
Fecha
Director
Enlace al recurso
DOI
ORCID
Google Scholar
Cvlac
gruplac
Descripción Dominio:
Título de la revista
ISSN de la revista
Título del volumen
Editor
Universidad Santo Tomás, Bogotá, Colombia
Compartir
Descripción
La lista de chequeo del trastorno por estrés postraumático (PCL) es el cuestionario más utilizado para detectar síntomas de TEPT en contextos clínicos y de investigación. La PCL-5 ha mostrado formulaciones multidimensionales que incluyen modelos de 2, 6, y 7 factores, alternativos al modelo de 4 factores del DSM-5. El presente estudio tuvo como objetivo realizar un análisis factorial confirmatorio (AFC) para evaluar la parsimonia de cinco modelos de la PCL-5. En una muestra de 278 adolescentes colombianos con historial de adversidad, se aplicaron la PCL-5, la escala de experiencias traumáticas ETISF-SR y el reporte para adolescentes de síntomas clínicos YSR/11-18. Se evaluaron cinco modelos de TEPT (de 1, 4, 6 y 7 factores) mediante AFC. Aunque todos los modelos presentaron índices de ajuste moderados y buenos, el modelo híbrido mostró el mejor desmpeño (RMSEA=0,0499; CFI=0,984; TLI=0,978; GFI=0,994). Las consistencias internas (alfa ordinal y omega) fueron buenas en todos los modelos (∞ord_G =0,93 y ∞ord_F =0,62-0,83). La PCL-5 mostró altas correlaciones con la ETISF-SR, siendo el abuso emocional la dimensión más correlacionada (ρ=0,599). En el caso del YSR, todas las dimensiones clínicas correlacionaron positivamente con la PCL-5, excepto la subescala “conductas delictivas”, que presentó una correlación moderada (ρ=0,397) con el factor de conductas externalizantes de la PCL-5.
The Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist (PCL) is the most widely used questionnaire for detecting PTSD symptoms in clinical and research settings. The PCL-5 has multidimensional formulations with 2, 6, and 7 factor models as alternatives to the DSM-5 four-factor model. This study aimed to perform a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to evaluate the parsimony of five models of the PCL-5. In a sample of 278 Colombian adolescents who were victims of adversity, the PCL-5, the ETISF-SR traumatic experiences scale, and the YSR/11-18 clinical symptom report for adolescents were applied to analyze five PTSD models with 1, 4, 6, and 7 factors through CFA. Although all models showed moderate to good fit indices, the hybrid model demonstrated the best performance (RMSEA=0,0499; CFI=0,984; TLI=0,978; GFI=0,994). All models had good general and factor-specific internal consistencies for ordinal alpha and omega (∞ord_G=0,93 and ∞ord_F=0,62-0,83). The PCL-5 exhibited high correlations with the ETISF-SR, particularly with the Emotional Abuse dimension (ρ=0,599). Regarding the YSR, all clinical dimensions correlated positively with the PCL-5, except for the “criminal behaviors” subscale, which had a moderate correlation with the PCL-5 externalizing behaviors factor (ρ=0,397).
The Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist (PCL) is the most widely used questionnaire for detecting PTSD symptoms in clinical and research settings. The PCL-5 has multidimensional formulations with 2, 6, and 7 factor models as alternatives to the DSM-5 four-factor model. This study aimed to perform a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to evaluate the parsimony of five models of the PCL-5. In a sample of 278 Colombian adolescents who were victims of adversity, the PCL-5, the ETISF-SR traumatic experiences scale, and the YSR/11-18 clinical symptom report for adolescents were applied to analyze five PTSD models with 1, 4, 6, and 7 factors through CFA. Although all models showed moderate to good fit indices, the hybrid model demonstrated the best performance (RMSEA=0,0499; CFI=0,984; TLI=0,978; GFI=0,994). All models had good general and factor-specific internal consistencies for ordinal alpha and omega (∞ord_G=0,93 and ∞ord_F=0,62-0,83). The PCL-5 exhibited high correlations with the ETISF-SR, particularly with the Emotional Abuse dimension (ρ=0,599). Regarding the YSR, all clinical dimensions correlated positively with the PCL-5, except for the “criminal behaviors” subscale, which had a moderate correlation with the PCL-5 externalizing behaviors factor (ρ=0,397).
Abstract
Idioma
Palabras clave
PTSD, PCL-5, multidimensional, confirmatory factor analysis, Colombia, adolescents, early traumatic experiences, TEPT, PCL-5, multidimensionalidad, análisis factorial confirmatorio, Colombia, adolescentes, experiencias traumáticas tempranas
Citación
Colecciones
Licencia Creative Commons
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0

