The revised Green et al., Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS):: psychometric properties, severity ranges, and clinical cut-offs
The revised Green et al., Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS):: psychometric properties, severity ranges, and clinical cut-offs
Background
The Green et al., Paranoid Thoughts Scale (GPTS) – comprising two 16-item scales assessing ideas of reference (Part A) and ideas of persecution (Part B) – was developed over a decade ago. Our aim was to conduct the first large-scale psychometric evaluation.
Methods
In total, 10 551 individuals provided GPTS data. Four hundred and twenty-two patients with psychosis and 805 non-clinical individuals completed GPTS Parts A and B. An additional 1743 patients with psychosis and 7581 non-clinical individuals completed GPTS Part B. Factor analysis, item response theory, and receiver operating characteristic analyses were conducted.
Results
The original two-factor structure of the GPTS had an inadequate model fit: Part A did not form a unidimensional scale and multiple items were locally dependant. A Revised-GPTS (R-GPTS) was formed, comprising eight-item ideas of reference and 10-item ideas of persecution subscales, which had an excellent model fit. All items in the new Reference (a = 2.09–3.67) and Persecution (a = 2.37–4.38) scales were strongly discriminative of shifts in paranoia and had high reliability across the spectrum of severity (a > 0.90). The R-GPTS score ranges are: average (Reference: 0–9; Persecution: 0–4); elevated (Reference: 10–15; Persecution: 5–10); moderately severe (Reference: 16–20; Persecution:11–17); severe (Reference: 21–24; Persecution: 18–27); and very severe (Reference: 25+; Persecution: 28+). Recommended cut-offs on the persecution scale are 11 to discriminate clinical levels of persecutory ideation and 18 for a likely persecutory delusion.
Conclusions
The psychometric evaluation indicated a need to improve the GPTS. The R-GPTS is a more precise measure, has excellent psychometric properties, and is recommended for future studies of paranoia.
Freeman, Daniel
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Loe, Bao S.
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Kingdon, David
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Startup, Helen
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Molodynski, Andrew
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Rosebrock, Laina
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Brown, Poppy
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Sheaves, Bryony
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Waite, Felicity
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Bird, Jessica C.
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Freeman, Daniel
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Loe, Bao S.
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Kingdon, David
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Startup, Helen
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Molodynski, Andrew
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Rosebrock, Laina
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Brown, Poppy
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Sheaves, Bryony
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Waite, Felicity
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Bird, Jessica C.
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Freeman, Daniel, Loe, Bao S., Kingdon, David, Startup, Helen, Molodynski, Andrew, Rosebrock, Laina, Brown, Poppy, Sheaves, Bryony, Waite, Felicity and Bird, Jessica C.
(2019)
The revised Green et al., Paranoid Thoughts Scale (R-GPTS):: psychometric properties, severity ranges, and clinical cut-offs.
Psychological Medicine.
(doi:10.1017/S0033291719003155).
Abstract
Background
The Green et al., Paranoid Thoughts Scale (GPTS) – comprising two 16-item scales assessing ideas of reference (Part A) and ideas of persecution (Part B) – was developed over a decade ago. Our aim was to conduct the first large-scale psychometric evaluation.
Methods
In total, 10 551 individuals provided GPTS data. Four hundred and twenty-two patients with psychosis and 805 non-clinical individuals completed GPTS Parts A and B. An additional 1743 patients with psychosis and 7581 non-clinical individuals completed GPTS Part B. Factor analysis, item response theory, and receiver operating characteristic analyses were conducted.
Results
The original two-factor structure of the GPTS had an inadequate model fit: Part A did not form a unidimensional scale and multiple items were locally dependant. A Revised-GPTS (R-GPTS) was formed, comprising eight-item ideas of reference and 10-item ideas of persecution subscales, which had an excellent model fit. All items in the new Reference (a = 2.09–3.67) and Persecution (a = 2.37–4.38) scales were strongly discriminative of shifts in paranoia and had high reliability across the spectrum of severity (a > 0.90). The R-GPTS score ranges are: average (Reference: 0–9; Persecution: 0–4); elevated (Reference: 10–15; Persecution: 5–10); moderately severe (Reference: 16–20; Persecution:11–17); severe (Reference: 21–24; Persecution: 18–27); and very severe (Reference: 25+; Persecution: 28+). Recommended cut-offs on the persecution scale are 11 to discriminate clinical levels of persecutory ideation and 18 for a likely persecutory delusion.
Conclusions
The psychometric evaluation indicated a need to improve the GPTS. The R-GPTS is a more precise measure, has excellent psychometric properties, and is recommended for future studies of paranoia.
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 October 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 November 2019
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 436408
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436408
ISSN: 0033-2917
PURE UUID: 93a691c2-99e6-4f72-b79e-25a7a195e738
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Date deposited: 10 Dec 2019 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 05:40
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Contributors
Author:
Daniel Freeman
Author:
Bao S. Loe
Author:
David Kingdon
Author:
Helen Startup
Author:
Andrew Molodynski
Author:
Laina Rosebrock
Author:
Poppy Brown
Author:
Bryony Sheaves
Author:
Felicity Waite
Author:
Jessica C. Bird
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