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Empirical Article

Factor Structure, Reliability, and Validity of the Daily Self-Report Measure for Trauma-Related Sequelae (DSR-TRS)

ORCID Icon, , &
Pages 217-241 | Received 07 Aug 2018, Accepted 09 Aug 2019, Published online: 22 Oct 2019
 

ABSTRACT

The structure and psychometrics of daily self-report measures have only rarely been empirically tested. We developed the Daily Self-Report of Trauma-Related Sequelae (DSR-TRS), comprised of items assessing, in the past day: (1) posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms: (2) symptoms of affective-, behavioral-, relational-, somatic-, dissociative-, and self-dysregulation; and (3) stressors, mood, coping strategies, and drug and alcohol use. Psychometric analyses were conducted with data from 141 women who participated in a randomized clinical trial of two present-centered therapies for PTSD or a wait-list condition and completed at least one DSR-TRS during two 30-day periods at baseline and posttreatment/wait-list. Five DSR-TRS subscales were created based on a series of exploratory, confirmatory, and multilevel factor analyses: Positive Affect, Negative Affect, Self-Regulation, Dysregulation, and PTSD symptoms. DSR-TRS subscales had acceptable within-person and between-person reliability. Convergent and discriminant validity were supported at baseline and posttest in relation to questionnaire and interview assessment measures. Implications for research on daily self-report measures such as the DSR-TRS with trauma survivors are discussed.

Acknowledgments

The study was funded by a grant from the National Institute of Justice (NIJ 2004-91861-CTR-IJ, J. Ford, Principal Investigator). The authors gratefully acknowledge the contributions of the research staff who provided oversight for or directly conducted study procedures (Dr. Khamis Abu-Hassaballah; Ms. Joan Levine, Ms. Jennifer Vendetti, and Ms. Kimberly Ramaglia) and the women who participated in the study.

Declaration of interest

Julian Ford is co-owner of Advanced Trauma Solutions, Inc., the sole licensed distributor of the TARGET program copyrighted by the University of Connecticut.

Supplemental data

Supplementary details of this article can be accessed Publisher's website.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the National Institute of Justice [NIJ 2004-91861-CTR-IJ].

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