Behavioral Screening Measures Delivered With a Smartphone App: Psychometric Properties and User Preference

Abstract The smartphone is an increasingly widespread technological vehicle for general health and psychological health promotion, evaluation, education, and sometimes intervention. However, the psychometric performance of behavioral health screening measures has not been commonly evaluated for the new, small-format, touch-screen medium. Before mobile-based applications for behavioral health screening can be disseminated confidently, the reliability and the validity of measures administered by the smartphone must be evaluated. We compared psychometric properties (i.e., internal consistency and test-retest reliability) of seven behavioral health measures completed on paper, a computer, and an iPhone by 45 army soldiers. The results showed the internal consistencies of the smartphone-delivered measures to be equivalent and very high across all three modalities and the test-retest reliability of the iPhone measures also to be very high. Furthermore, completion of the behavioral screening measures by the iPhone was highly preferred over the other modalities and was reported to be easy and convenient. Our findings help corroborate the use of smartphones and other small mobile devices for behavioral health screening.

[1]  J. Goodie,et al.  Sleep disturbance during military deployment. , 2008, Military medicine.

[2]  S. Wessely,et al.  Combat exposure increases risk of alcohol misuse in military personnel following deployment , 2009, Evidence-based mental health.

[3]  T. Tanielian,et al.  Invisible Wounds of War Psychological and Cognitive Injuries, Their Consequences, and Services to Assist Recovery , 2022 .

[4]  Charles W Hoge,et al.  Prevalence of mental health problems and functional impairment among active component and National Guard soldiers 3 and 12 months following combat in Iraq. , 2010, Archives of general psychiatry.

[5]  R. Owen,et al.  Co-occurring medical, psychiatric, and alcohol-related disorders among veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan. , 2010, Psychosomatics.

[6]  M. Rudd,et al.  Use of the modified scale for suicidal ideation with suicide ideators and attempters. , 1995, Journal of clinical psychology.

[7]  E. Blanchard,et al.  Psychometric properties of the PTSD Checklist (PCL). , 1996, Behaviour research and therapy.

[8]  G. Hawthorne,et al.  Response categories and anger measurement: do fewer categories result in poorer measurement? , 2005, Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology.

[9]  Charles W Hoge,et al.  Longitudinal assessment of mental health problems among active and reserve component soldiers returning from the Iraq war. , 2007, JAMA.

[10]  D. Luxton,et al.  A Psychometric Study of the Suicide Ideation Scale , 2011, Archives of suicide research : official journal of the International Academy for Suicide Research.

[11]  D. King,et al.  Validation of Scales From the Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory in a Sample of Operation Iraqi Freedom Veterans , 2008, Assessment.

[12]  A. Dervaux,et al.  Military combat deployment and alcohol use. , 2008, JAMA.

[13]  Kenneth J. Ruggiero,et al.  Psychometric Properties of the PTSD Checklist—Civilian Version , 2003, Journal of traumatic stress.

[14]  D. Warden,et al.  Traumatic Brain Injury Screening: Preliminary Findings in a US Army Brigade Combat Team , 2009, The Journal of head trauma rehabilitation.

[15]  B. Stamm Measurement of stress, trauma, and adaptation , 1996 .

[16]  Melinda J. Metzger-Abamukong,et al.  Soldiers' personal technologies on deployment and at home. , 2012, Telemedicine journal and e-health : the official journal of the American Telemedicine Association.

[17]  Lynda A. King,et al.  PTSD symptom increases in Iraq-deployed soldiers: comparison with nondeployed soldiers and associations with baseline symptoms, deployment experiences, and postdeployment stress. , 2010, Journal of traumatic stress.

[18]  S. Guay,et al.  Validation of the Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory in French-Canadian Veterans: Findings on the Relation between Deployment Experiences and Postdeployment Health , 2006, Canadian journal of psychiatry. Revue canadienne de psychiatrie.

[19]  Kendall C. Wilkins,et al.  Synthesis of the psychometric properties of the PTSD checklist (PCL) military, civilian, and specific versions , 2011, Depression and anxiety.

[20]  R. Spitzer,et al.  The PHQ-9: A new depression diagnostic and severity measure , 2002 .

[21]  R. Spitzer,et al.  The PHQ-9: validity of a brief depression severity measure. , 2001, Journal of general internal medicine.

[22]  L. Rajmil Health measurement scales. A practical guide to their development and use, 3rd ed , 2005 .

[23]  M. Rudd,et al.  The prevalence of suicidal ideation among college students. , 1989, Suicide & life-threatening behavior.

[24]  Jeffrey Knight,et al.  Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory: A Collection of Measures for Studying Deployment-Related Experiences of Military Personnel and Veterans , 2006 .

[25]  B. Kuehn Military probes epidemic of suicide: mental health issues remain prevalent. , 2010, JAMA.

[26]  Shira Maguen,et al.  Trends and risk factors for mental health diagnoses among Iraq and Afghanistan veterans using Department of Veterans Affairs health care, 2002-2008. , 2009, American journal of public health.