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Journal Article

Citation

Wu CY, Lee MB, Lin YY, Liao SC. J. Formos. Med. Assoc. 2019; 118(9): 1308-1316.

Affiliation

Taiwan Suicide Prevention Center, Taiwan; Department of Psychiatry, National Taiwan University College of Medicine & National Taiwan University Hospital, Taiwan.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2019, Scientific Communications International)

DOI

10.1016/j.jfma.2019.05.025

PMID

31262615

Abstract

BACKGROUND/PURPOSE: Early detection of suicide risk is a challenge in suicide prevention. A comprehensive yet efficient tool providing timely identification of key risk factors allows healthcare providers to initiate interventions. The study aims to validate the 9-item Concise Mental Health Checklist (CMHC-9).

METHODS: A series of cross-sectional surveys were conducted in 3982 participants from psychiatric outpatient (n = 931), medical outpatient (n = 931) and community (n = 2120) populations. The factor analysis with internal consistency coefficients (Cronbach's α) and receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis were performed to evaluate the scale's reliability and validity.

RESULTS: The internal consistency of the CMHC-9 was satisfactory based on Cronbach's α values for the total sample (α = 0.79) and the three sub-samples (i.e., α = 0.76 for psychiatric subjects; 0.67 for community subjects; and 0.69 for medical outpatient subjects). Hierarchical exploratory factor analysis revealed that the CMHC-9 was a single-dimensional scale with two-factor structure of psychopathology and suicidality. The two-factor solution was confirmed by confirmatory factor analysis. The optimal cut-off of 3/4 obtained from the ROC analysis represented a satisfactory sensitivity (92%) and specificity (82%) in identifying recent suicide ideation.

CONCLUSION: This large-scale study confirmed the CMHC-9 as a brief and effective tool for suicide risk detection. It is recommended that CMHC-9 can be used for care engagement and risk identification in both medical and community settings among people at risk for suicide.

Copyright © 2019 Formosan Medical Association. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Mental health; Psychometric evaluation; Suicidal ideation; Suicide prevention

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