The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Washington, DC 20037, USA.
Psychiatry Res. 2011 Aug 30;189(1):141-8. doi: 10.1016/j.psychres.2011.05.041. Epub 2011 Jun 17.
The public's level of mental health literacy remains low, despite growing access to information regarding mental illnesses. Because few measures exist to assess the level of knowledge of mental illnesses in lay samples, the Multiple-Choice Knowledge of Mental Illnesses Test (MC-KOMIT) was developed, initially for use in a study involving police officers, some of whom received 40 h of training focused on recognizing mental illnesses, using verbal de-escalation techniques, and making mental health referrals when appropriate. This report details the initial development of the 100 questions in the item bank and the eventual selection of the final 33 items that were retained. For these 33 items, internal consistency was demonstrated, and test-retest reliability was examined among officers not in the mental health-related training who completed the test on Monday morning and again on Friday afternoon. Construct validity was examined by three hypothesis tests: the MC-KOMIT was sensitive to change related to the educational intervention, scores were significantly correlated with years of educational attainment, and officers reporting past or current treatment for a mental health problem scored higher than those without such a history. This initial report suggests that the MC-KOMIT may be useful in quantifying knowledge of mental illnesses in police officers and other diverse lay samples.
尽管公众获取有关精神疾病的信息的途径越来越多,但他们的心理健康素养水平仍然很低。由于几乎没有衡量非专业人群对精神疾病知识了解程度的方法,因此开发了多项选择精神疾病知识测验(MC-KOMIT),最初是为一项涉及警察的研究而开发的,其中一些警察接受了 40 小时的培训,重点是识别精神疾病、使用口头缓和技术以及在适当情况下进行心理健康转介。本报告详细介绍了项目库中最初的 100 个问题的开发过程,以及最终选择保留的 33 个最终项目的过程。对于这 33 个项目,已经证明了内部一致性,并且对未接受心理健康相关培训的警察进行了测试,他们在周一早上和周五下午完成了测试,检验了重测信度。通过三个假设检验来检验结构效度:MC-KOMIT 对与教育干预相关的变化敏感,分数与受教育年限显著相关,报告过去或现在接受过心理健康问题治疗的警察的得分高于没有此类病史的警察。本初步报告表明,MC-KOMIT 可能有助于量化警察和其他不同非专业人群对精神疾病的知识。