Mental health screening: Severity and cut-off point sensitivity of the Athlete Psychological Strain Questionnaire in male and female elite athletes

Simon Rice, Lisa Olive, Vincent Gouttebarge, Alexandra G. Parker, Patrick Clifton, Peter Harcourt, Michael Llyod, Alex Kountouris, Ben Smith, Beau Busch, Rosemary Purcell

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

39 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objectives To examine the sensitivity/specificity of the Athlete Psychological Strain Questionnaire (APSQ) in both male and female elite athletes, and also assess internal consistency and convergent/divergent validity, and determine discriminative validity relative to current injury status. Methods Data were provided by 1093 elite athletes (males n=1007; females n=84). Scale validity and reliability values were benchmarked against validated measures of general psychological distress and well-being. ROC curve analysis determined a range of optimal severity cut-points. Results Bias-corrected area under curve (AUC) values supported three APSQ cut-points for moderate (AUC=0.901), high (AUC=0.944) and very high (AUC=0.951) categories. APSQ total score Cronbach coefficients exceeded those observed for the Kessler 10 (K-10). Gender ×injury status interactions were observed for the APSQ total score and K-10, whereby injured female athletes reported higher scores relative to males and non-injured female counterparts. Conclusion By providing a range of cut-off scores identifying those scoring in the marginal and elevated ranges, the APSQ may better facilitate earlier identification for male and female elite athletes vulnerable to mental health symptoms and developing syndromes. Use of the APSQ may support sports medicine practitioners and allied health professionals to detect early mental ill health manifestations and facilitate timely management and ideally, remediation of symptoms.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere000712
JournalBMJ Open Sport and Exercise Medicine
Volume6
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Keywords

  • assessment
  • athlete
  • distress
  • injury
  • mental health

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