A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Validation of the Bullying Scale for Adults - Results of the PRONIA-study




AuthorsHaidl T.K., Schneider N., Dickmann K., Ruhrmann S., Kaiser N., Rosen M., Seves M., Lichtenstein T., Upthegrove R., Salokangas R.K.R., Pantelis C., Meisenzahl E., Wood S.J., Brambilla P., Borgwardt S., Rebekka L., Kambeitz J., Koutsouleris N., Schultze-Lutter F.; the PRONIA-consortium

PublisherPergamon Press

Publication year2020

JournalJournal of Psychiatric Research

Volume129

First page 88

Last page97

Number of pages10

ISSN0022-3956

eISSN1879-1379

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpsychires.2020.04.004


Abstract

Background:
Bullying as a specific subtype of adverse life events is a major risk factor for poor mental health. Although many questionnaires on bullying are available, so far none covers bullying retrospectively throughout school and working life. To close this gap, the Bullying Scale for Adults (BSA) was designed.

Methods:
Based on data of 622 participants from five European countries collected in the prospective multicenter Personalized Prognostic Tools for Early Psychosis Management (PRONIA) study, we investigated whether the BSA is a reliable and valid measurement for bullying and whether there is a difference across different diagnostic groups of early mental disorders (recent onset depressive/ psychotic patients, patients at clinical high-risk of psychosis) and healthy controls.

Results:
Bullying experiences were significantly less frequent in healthy controls than in patient groups, with no significant differences between the three clinical groups. The BSA exhibited a high item scale discrimination (r >.3) and very good internal consistency (Cronbach's α =.93). Four factors were identified: 1. Sexual harassment, 2. Emotional Abuse, 3. Physical Abuse, 4. Problems at school. The highly significant correlation between bullying, and childhood adversities and trauma (r =.645, p <.001) indicated good concurrent validity. Discussion: The BSA is the first validated questionnaire that, in retrospective, reliably records various aspects of bullying (incl. its consequences) not only throughout childhood but also working life. It can be used to assess bullying as a transdiagnostic risk factor of mental disorders in different mental disorders, esp. psychosis and depression.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 14:58