The reliability of alcohol abusers' self-reports of drinking and life events that occurred in the distant past.

This study investigated the test-retest reliability of 69 alcohol abusers' current reports about their past (approximately 8 years prior to interview) drinking behavior and life events. Drinking behavior was assessed by the Lifetime Drinking History (LDH) questionnaire and life events were assessed using the Recent Life Changes Questionnaire (RLCQ). Reliability coefficients for LDH variables were generally moderate to high (r = .52 to .81). Using empirical criteria, the diagnostic power of the two LDH interviews to classify correctly subjects as either having had or not having had a drinking problem was quite high. The reliability coefficient for the RLCQ was r = .85 and 91.7% of the identified events were reported in both interviews. Similarly high test-retest reliabilities and individual event agreement rates were obtained for the six homogeneous subscales of the RLCQ. Subjects were also asked why they had given inconsistent answers to life events questions in the two interviews. Inconsistencies often resulted from errors in the temporal placement of events or from misunderstanding items, rather than from failure to recall an event; this suggests that some sources of error in recalling life events can be reduced. It is concluded that alcohol abusers' reports of drinking and life events occurring many years prior to the date of interview are generally reliable. This finding is consistent with previous studies showing high test-retest reliabilities for reports of recent drinking and related events.

[1]  O. Barbarin Evaluating alcohol and drug abuse treatment effectiveness: Recent advances. , 1980 .

[2]  E F Loftus,et al.  Since the eruption of Mt. St. Helens, has anyone beaten you up? Improving the accuracy of retrospective reports with landmarkevents , 1983, Memory & cognition.

[3]  Jacob Cohen A Coefficient of Agreement for Nominal Scales , 1960 .

[4]  P. Thoits,et al.  2 – Dimensions of Life Events That Influence Psychological Distress: An Evaluation and Synthesis of the Literature , 1983 .

[5]  T. H. Holmes,et al.  The Social Readjustment Rating Scale. , 1967, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[6]  L. Sobell,et al.  Can We Do Without Alcohol Abusers’ Self-Reports? , 1986 .

[7]  S. Monroe Assessment of life events: retrospective vs concurrent strategies. , 1982, Archives of general psychiatry.

[8]  R. Hodgson,et al.  Alcohol Dependence and Phobic Anxiety States II. a Retrospective Study , 1984, British Journal of Psychiatry.

[9]  E. Paykel Methodological aspects of life events research. , 1983, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[10]  S. Finklestein,et al.  The predictive power of diagnostic tests and the effect of prevalence of illness. , 1983, Archives of general psychiatry.

[11]  J. Mendels,et al.  The value of interviewing family and friends in assessing life stressors. , 1978, Archives of general psychiatry.

[12]  Jacob Cohen,et al.  Applied multiple regression/correlation analysis for the behavioral sciences , 1979 .

[13]  C. Taylor,et al.  Patterns of outcome: drinking histories over ten years among a group of alcoholics. , 1985, British journal of addiction.

[14]  D P Funch,et al.  Measuring life stress: factors affecting fall-off in the reporting of life events. , 1984, Journal of health and social behavior.

[15]  H A Skinner,et al.  Reliability of alcohol use indices. The Lifetime Drinking History and the MAST. , 1982, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[16]  J. Rabkin,et al.  Live events, stress, and illness. , 1976, Science.

[17]  J. Polich,et al.  The validity of self-reports in alcoholism research. , 1982, Addictive behaviors.

[18]  Linda C. Sobell,et al.  Alcoholism Treatment Outcome Evaluation Methodology , 1982 .

[19]  K. Poikolainen,et al.  Accuracy of retrospective measurement of individual alcohol consumption in men; a reinterview after 18 years. , 1983, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[20]  T. Harris,et al.  Social Origins of Depression: A Study of Psychiatric Disorder in Women , 1979 .

[21]  B. Tuchfeld Spontaneous remission in alcoholics. Empirical observations and theoretical implications. , 1981, Journal of studies on alcohol.

[22]  R. Rahe Epidemiological Studies of Life Change and Illness , 1975, International journal of psychiatry in medicine.

[23]  M. Zimmerman Methodological issues in the assessment of life events: A review of issues and research , 1983 .

[24]  S A Maisto,et al.  Reliability of alcohol abusers' self-reports of drinking behavior. , 1979, Behaviour research and therapy.

[25]  T. H. Holmes,et al.  SOCIAL STRESS AND ILLNESS ONSET. , 1964, Journal of psychosomatic research.

[26]  P. Lewinsohn,et al.  Stressful Life Events and Their Contexts , 1983 .