The Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory: Development and validation of a short version.

Edna B. Foa(Center for Anxiety and Depression), Jonathan D. Huppert(Center for Anxiety and Depression), Susanne Leiberg(Center for Anxiety and Depression), Robert Langner(Center for Anxiety and Depression), Rafael Kichic(Center for Anxiety and Depression), Greg Hajcak(Center for Anxiety and Depression), Paul M. Šalkovskis(Psychiatry Research Trust)
Psychological Assessment
January 1, 2002
Cited by 2,970

Abstract

This article reports on the development of a revised version of the Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory (OCI; E. B. Foa, M. J. Kozak, P. Salkovskis, M. E. Coles, & N. Amir, 1998), a psychometrically sound, theoretically driven, self-report measure. The revised OCI (OCI-R) improves on the parent version in 3 ways: It eliminates the redundant frequency scale, simplifies the scoring of the subscales, and reduces overlap across subscales. The reliability and validity of the OCI-R were examined in 215 patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), 243 patients with other anxiety disorders, and 677 nonanxious individuals. The OCI-R, which contains 18 items and 6 subscales, has retained excellent psychometric properties. The OCI-R and its subscales differentiated well between individuals with and without OCD. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analyses demonstrated the usefulness of the OCI-R as a diagnostic tool for screening patients with OCD, utilizing empirically derived cutscores.


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