Ai. Alterman et al., INTERVIEWER SEVERITY RATINGS AND COMPOSITE SCORES OF THE ASI - A FURTHER LOOK, Drug and alcohol dependence, 34(3), 1994, pp. 201-209
The psychometric characteristics of the Addiction Severity Index (ASI)
interviewer severity ratings (ISRs) and composite scores (CSs) were e
xamined for a newly trained group of interviewers. The interrater reli
abilities of seven raters for 9 methadone maintenance (MM) pilot subje
cts were determined. These were found to be excellent for the CSs, but
only moderate for the ISRs. Regression analyses were performed on the
data of 407 methadone maintenance patients entering all of the variab
les in each area as the independent variables and the ISR as the depen
dent variable. These analyses indicated that, on average, 55-60% of th
e variance in ISRs was explained. However, while 63% of the variance w
as explained for the legal scale only 38% of the variance of the drug
scale was explained. The subject's rating of either the need for treat
ment or the seriousness of the problem accounted for the most variance
, with the exception of the drug and alcohol areas. The internal consi
stency of the composite scores was then examined for this sample using
Cronbach's standardized alpha statistic. These were found to be gener
ally satisfactory ranging from 0.62 for the drug scale to 0.87 for the
alcohol and psychiatric scales. A mean interitem correlation of 0.11
for the drug scale was obtained suggesting relatively low item homogen
eity. Finally, correlations between the CSs and ISRs were calculated f
or each scale. Moderate to high relationships were found (0.53-0.78) w
ith the exception of the correlation for the employment area which was
only 0.08. The findings are discussed in terms of the nature of and l
imitations of the ISRs and CSs.