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Brief Adjustment Scale-6 for Measurement-Based Care: Psychometric Properties, Measurement Invariance, and Clinical Utility.

Hayoung KoJaehyun ShinLee D Cooper
Published in: Assessment (2022)
The Brief Adjustment Scale-6 (BASE-6) was recently developed for measuring general psychological functioning within measurement-based care (MBC). The present study further evaluated psychometric properties, generalizability to race/ethnic populations, and clinical utility of the BASE-6. Three adult samples, Sample 1: online community participants ( n = 394); Sample 2: college students ( n = 249); Sample 3: outpatient clinic clients ( n = 80), were included. The results demonstrated a high level of internal consistency, good test-retest reliability, and convergent validity in all samples. The unidimensional structure of BASE-6 was confirmed and factorial invariance was established across groups. Finally, the BASE-6 captured change over time by demonstrating a large effect size of pre-post treatment changes and significant linear change in multilevel growth modeling. These results support the BASE-6 as a reliable and valid measure regardless of race/ethnicity and can sensitively detect clinical change over the course of the treatment. Thus, the BASE-6 appears to accurately monitor overall psychological adjustment.
Keyphrases
  • psychometric properties
  • healthcare
  • palliative care
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • quality improvement
  • pain management
  • sleep quality
  • health information
  • affordable care act
  • hiv testing
  • antiretroviral therapy