Aim: The Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA 3.0) is the most widely used instrument assessing psychosocial impairment secondary to eating disorder symptoms. However, there is conflicting advice regarding the dimensionality and optimal method of scoring the CIA. We sought to resolve this confusion by conducting a comprehensive factor analytic study of the CIA in a community sample (N = 301) and clinical sample comprising patients with a diagnosed eating disorder (N = 209). Convergent and discriminant validity were also assessed. Method: The CIA and measures of eating disorder symptoms were administered to both samples. Results: Factor analyses indicated there is a general impairment factor underlying all items on the CIA that is reliably me...
Objective: To assess the factor structure of the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE) in three differen...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the psychometric properties and factorial structure ...
Background: Large variability in tests and differences in scoring systems used to study central cohe...
A number of studies have provided data on young women for the Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA, v...
AbstractEating disorders have a profound and highly specific impact on psychosocial functioning. The...
Eating disorders have a profound and highly specific impact on psychosocial functioning. The aim of ...
Identifying measures that reliably and validly assess clinical impairment has important implications...
BACKGROUND: The Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA) is a measure of functional impairment secondar...
The Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA) is a widely used self-report measure of the psychosocial im...
OBJECTIVE: Measurement of disease-related impairment and distress is central to diagnostic, therapeu...
The aim of the current study was to collect clinical normative data for the Clinical Impairment Asse...
Background: Dysfunctional cognitions regarding weight and shape and their implications for self este...
<p><i>Notes</i>. Scores ranging from 0 = <i>feature was absent</i> to 6 = <i>feature was present eve...
Previous research has failed to find differences in eating disorder and general psychopathology and ...
A major change to the DSM-5 was the integration of a new severity rating system, ranging from mild t...
Objective: To assess the factor structure of the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE) in three differen...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the psychometric properties and factorial structure ...
Background: Large variability in tests and differences in scoring systems used to study central cohe...
A number of studies have provided data on young women for the Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA, v...
AbstractEating disorders have a profound and highly specific impact on psychosocial functioning. The...
Eating disorders have a profound and highly specific impact on psychosocial functioning. The aim of ...
Identifying measures that reliably and validly assess clinical impairment has important implications...
BACKGROUND: The Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA) is a measure of functional impairment secondar...
The Clinical Impairment Assessment (CIA) is a widely used self-report measure of the psychosocial im...
OBJECTIVE: Measurement of disease-related impairment and distress is central to diagnostic, therapeu...
The aim of the current study was to collect clinical normative data for the Clinical Impairment Asse...
Background: Dysfunctional cognitions regarding weight and shape and their implications for self este...
<p><i>Notes</i>. Scores ranging from 0 = <i>feature was absent</i> to 6 = <i>feature was present eve...
Previous research has failed to find differences in eating disorder and general psychopathology and ...
A major change to the DSM-5 was the integration of a new severity rating system, ranging from mild t...
Objective: To assess the factor structure of the Eating Disorder Examination (EDE) in three differen...
Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the psychometric properties and factorial structure ...
Background: Large variability in tests and differences in scoring systems used to study central cohe...