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A Reliability and Validity Analysis of an Alcohol-Related Harm Scale for Surveys

Jürgen Rehm, Ulrich Frick, Susan Bondy

Objective: To test reliability and construct validity of an alcohol-related harm scale widely used in North American surveys. Method: Data base: three representative general population household telephone surveys in Ontario, Canada (1994: N = 2,022, response rate 63%; 1995: N = 994, response rate 63%; 1996: N = 2,721, response rate 64%). Statistical analysis: psychometric analysis of internal consistency (Cronbach); Mokken scaling to test homogeneity of underlying construct; tests for construct validity by measuring associations with similar scales. Results: The scale showed high internal consistency and homogeneity of the underlying construct. The correlations with the CAGE and ICD-10 criteria for dependence ranged between 0.5 and 0.7. Conclusions: The harm scale is measuring a unidimensional construct, but one which is not distinct from that measured by the CAGE or dependence criteria. (J. Stud. Alcohol 60: 203-208, 1999)