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Development of the Gambling Disorder Identification Test (G-DIT): Protocol for a Delphi Method Study (Preprint)

Authors :
Olof Molander
Rachel Volberg
Kristina Sundqvist
Peter Wennberg
Viktor Månsson
Anne H Berman
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
JMIR Publications Inc., 2018.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Research on the identification and treatment of problem gambling has been characterized by a wide range of outcome measures and instruments. However, a single instrument measuring gambling behavior, severity, and specific deleterious effects is lacking. OBJECTIVE This protocol describes the development of the Gambling Disorder Identification Test (G-DIT), which is a 9- to 12-item multiple-choice scale with three domains: gambling consumption, symptom severity, and negative consequences. The scale is analogous to the widely used Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) and the Drug Use Disorders Identification Test (DUDIT). METHODS The G-DIT is developed in four steps: (1) identification of items eligible for the G-DIT from a pool of existing gambling measures; (2) presentation of items proposed for evaluation by invited expert researchers through an online Delphi process and subsequent consensus meetings; (3) pilot testing of a draft of the 9- to 12-item version in a small group of participants with problem gambling behavior (n=12); and (4) evaluation of the psychometric properties of the final G-DIT measure in relation to the existing instruments and self-reported criteria of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th edition (DSM-5), among individuals with problem gambling and nonproblematic recreational gambling behaviors (n=600). This protocol article summarizes step 1 and describes steps 2 and 3 in detail. RESULTS As of October 2018, steps 1-3 are complete, and step 4 is underway. CONCLUSIONS Implementation of this online Delphi study early in the psychometric development process will contribute to the face and construct validity of the G-DIT. We believe the G-DIT will be useful as a standard outcome measure in the field of problem gambling research and serve as a problem-identification tool in clinical settings. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPOR RR1-10.2196/12006

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........05d27cfacf7605dc0f83b7840bfab06e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2196/preprints.12006