Abstract

The Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) is a screening tool used to measure psychological functioning among children and adolescents. It has been extensively used worldwide, but its psychometric properties, such as internal structure and reliability, seem to vary across countries. This is the first study exploring the construct validity and reliability of the Spanish version of SDQ among early adolescents (self-reported) and their parents in Latin America. A total of 1,284 early adolescents (9–15 years) and their parents answered the SDQ. We also collected demographic variables. A confirmatory factor analysis was conducted to assess the latent structure of the SDQ. We also used the multitrait-multimethod analysis to separate the true variance on the constructs from variance resulting from measurement methods (self-report vs. parent report), and evaluated the agreement between adolescents and their parents. We found that the original five-factor model was a good solution and the resulting sub-scales had good internal consistency. We also found that the self-reported and parental versions of SDQ provide different information, which are complementary and provide a better picture of the emotional, social, and conduct problems of adolescents. We have added evidence for the construct validity and reliability of the Spanish self-reported and parental SDQ versions in a Chilean sample.

Highlights

  • Mental health is an important problem worldwide, and Chile is no exception

  • For adolescents in Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America, we have found no studies exploring the construct validity of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) by means of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), using parental and self-reported data

  • The materials used to produce the following results will be available upon request, including a detailed list of documents and all the data files needed in order for replication, as well as every step and the specific sequence the interested researchers should take into account to make data available [70]

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Summary

Introduction

Mental health is an important problem worldwide, and Chile is no exception. In general, the main cause of years lost because of disability among the population aged 10–24 years old is neuropsychiatric disorder (45%) [1]. Mental health problems have an important effect, on the lives of the affected individuals, and on the people around them (family, school, peers). Interest in developing instruments to detect these emotional and behavioural disorders has been increasing. The World Health Organization has repetitively advocated using screening tools in primary care settings and schools [6,7,8]. These instruments should be valid and reliable for assessing mental health among adolescents, but should be short, simple, and culturally adapted/tested

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