Background: In the United States, the Latinx community is growing at a faster rate than any other racial or ethnic minority group. Members of this community have been found to experience a number of acculturative stressors after immigrating, including xenophobia, racism, and discrimination. Although several scales have been created in recent years to measure acculturative stress in Spanish-speaking immigrants, they are long, do not have nuanced subscales, or have not been validated in an extremely diverse sample of Latinx immigrants. Objective: The purpose of the current study was to translate and psychometrically validate the Riverside Acculturative Stress Inventory (RASI) in a diverse sample of Spanish-speaking immigrants. Methods: A sample of 202 Latinx immigrants in the United States completed the RASI as well as measures of depression and anxiety. Results: An initial confirmatory factor analysis suggested that the overall subscale factor structure was not an ideal fit for the data. An exploratory factor analysis suggested the retention of four subscales, each with three items, forming a 12-item Spanish RASI short form. As indices of convergent validity, the RASI total score was positively associated with depression and anxiety. Conclusions: The findings from the study contribute to the literature a brief and valid assessment of acculturative stress in Spanish-speaking immigrants. The RASI Spanish short form holds promise to stimulate research on the unique adversities experienced by Latinx immigrants.
Objective: The construct of participation after traumatic brain injury (TBI) can be difficult to operationalize. Psychometric network analysis offers an empirical approach to visualizing and quantifying the associations between activities that comprise participation, elucidating the relations among the construct's components without assuming the presence of a latent common cause and generating a model to inform future measurement methods. The current research applied psychometric network analysis to the Participation Assessment with Recombined Tools-Objective (PART-O) within a sample of Service Members and Veterans (SM/Vs) with a history of TBI at 1-and 2-years (T1 and T2) post-injury. Participants: Participants (N = 663) were SM/Vs with a history of TBI who completed comprehensive inpatient rehabilitation services at a VA Polytrauma Rehabilitation Center (PRC). Setting: Five VA PRCs. Design: Cross-sectional, retrospective analysis of data from the Veterans Affairs (VA) TBI Model Systems study. Main Measures: Participation Assessment with Recombined Tools-Objective (PART-O)Results: Network analysis demonstrated that the PART-O structure was generally consistent over time, but some differences emerged. The greatest difference observed was the association between "spending time with friends" and "giving emotional support" to others. This association was more than twice as strong at T2 as at T1. The "out of the house" item was most central, as demonstrated by dense connections within its own subscale (Out and About) and items in other subscales (i.e., Social Relations and Productivity). When examining items connecting the three subscales, the items related to giving emotional support, Internet use, and getting out of the house emerged as the strongest connectors at T1, and Internet was the strongest connector at T2.
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