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Recovery assessment scale: Examining the factor structure of the German version (RAS-G) in people with schizophrenia spectrum disorders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 December 2016

M. Cavelti*
Affiliation:
Translational research center, university hospital of psychiatry and psychotherapy, university of Bern, 111, Bolligenstrasse, 3000Bern 60, Switzerland Orygen, The National centre of excellence in youth mental health, centre for youth mental health, the university of Melbourne, 35, Poplar road, VIC 3052Parkville, Australia
M. Wirtz
Affiliation:
University of education Freiburg, 21, Kunzenweg, 79117Freiburg, Germany
P. Corrigan
Affiliation:
Department of psychology, Illinois institute of technology, 3300 South Federal Street, IL 60616Chicago, USA
R. Vauth
Affiliation:
Psychiatric university clinics basel, center for psychotic disorders, Kornhausgasse 7, 4501Basel, Switzerland
*
Corresponding author. Orygen, The National centre of excellence in youth mental health, centre for youth mental health, the university of Melbourne, 35, Poplar road, VIC 3052 Parkville, Australia. Tel.: +61 (0)411 871 273. E-mail addresses: [email protected], [email protected] (M. Cavelti).
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Abstract

Background

The recovery framework has found its way into local and national mental health services and policies around the world, especially in English speaking countries. To promote this process, it is necessary to assess personal recovery validly and reliably. The Recovery Assessment Scale (RAS) is the most established measure in recovery research. The aim of the current study is to examine the factor structure of the German version of the RAS (RAS-G).

Methods

One hundred and fifty-six German-speaking clients with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder from a community mental health service completed the RAS-G plus measures of recovery attitudes, self-stigma, psychotic symptoms, depression, and functioning. A confirmatory factor analysis of the original 24-item RAS version was conducted to examine its factor structure, followed by reliability and validity testing of the extracted factors.

Results

The CFA yielded five factors capturing 14 items which showed a substantial overlap with the original subscales Personal Confidence and Hope, Goal and Success Orientation, Willingness to Ask for Help, Reliance on Others, and No Domination by Symptoms. The factors demonstrated mean to excellent reliability (0.59–0.89) and satisfactory criterial validity by positive correlations with measures of recovery attitudes and functioning, and negative correlations with measures of self-stigma, and psychotic and depressive symptoms.

Conclusions

The study results are discussed in the light of other studies examining the factor structure of the RAS. Overall, they support the use of the RAS-G as a means to promote recovery oriented services, policies, and research in German-speaking countries.

Type
Original article
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017

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