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Journal Article

Citation

Snowden RJ, Tiley O, Gray NS. Health Sci. Rep. 2023; 6(1): e1028.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/hsr2.1028

PMID

36605458

PMCID

PMC9804447

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: The Cardiff Self-Injury Inventory (CSII) is a short (1 min), relatively nonintrusive, measure of previous self-injury behaviors written in English. It measures self-injury with suicidal intent and without such intent, covers actions versus thoughts, and has two time periods (lifetime vs recent [defined as the last 3 months]). The study aimed to examine its psychometric properties and its relationship to more well-established measures.

METHODS: A UK community sample of 184 participants completed the CSII and two other measures of self-harming (Deliberate Self-Harm Inventory [DSHI] and Suicidal Behaviors Questionnaire-Revised [SBQ-R]) in March 2020-May 2020. Fifty participants also repeated these measurements 1-2 weeks later.

RESULTS: The CSII showed strong psychometric properties with internal reliability of 0.87 and a test-retest of 0.82. The subscales also showed strong psychometric properties. The CSII showed strong concurrent validity to the other measures of self-injury (SBQ-R, r = 0.70; DSHI, r = 0.81). A factor analysis supported the idea that there are two distinct components to the overall CSII score arising due to the distinction between suicidal and nonsuicidal behaviors.

CONCLUSION: The CSII has good psychometric properties in this population and can be used as a fast, nonintrusive, measure of different self-injurious behaviors for clinical or research purposes.


Language: en

Keywords

suicide; deliberate self‐harm; nonsuicidal self‐injury (NSSI)

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