1. The Hispanic Stress Inventory Version 2: Improving the assessment of acculturation stress.
- Author
-
Cervantes, Richard C., Padilla, Amado M., Fisher, Dennis G., and Napper, Lucy E.
- Subjects
- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL stress testing , *ACCULTURATION , *PSYCHOLOGY of Hispanic Americans , *PSYCHOLOGY of immigrants , *BRIEF Symptom Inventory , *TEST validity , *PSYCHOLOGY , *PSYCHOMETRICS , *PSYCHOLOGICAL tests , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH funding , *PSYCHOLOGICAL stress , *STANDARDS , *EQUIPMENT & supplies ,RESEARCH evaluation - Abstract
This article reports on a 2-phase study to revise the Hispanic Stress Inventory (HSI; Cervantes, Padilla, & Salgado de Snyder, 1991). The necessity for a revised stress-assessment instrument was determined by demographic and political shifts affecting Latin American immigrants and later-generation Hispanics in the United States in the 2 decades since the development of the HSI. The data for the revision of the HSI (termed the HSI2) was collected at 4 sites: Los Angeles, El Paso, Miami, and Boston, and included 941 immigrants and 575 U.S.-born Hispanics and a diverse population of Hispanic subgroups. The immigrant version of the HSI2 includes 10 stress subscales, whereas the U.S.-born version includes 6 stress subscales. Both versions of the HSI2 are shown to possess satisfactory Cronbach's alpha reliabilities and demonstrate expert-based content validity, as well as concurrent validity when correlated with subscales of the Brief Symptom Inventory (Derogatis, 1993) and the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (Kroenke, Spitzer, & Williams, 2001). The new HSI2 instruments are recommended for use by clinicians and researchers interested in assessing psychosocial stress among diverse Hispanic populations of various ethnic subgroups, age groups, and geographic location. (PsycINFO Database Record [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF