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22-01-2025 | Original Article

Predictive Validity and Treatment Sensitivity of the Death-Implicit Association Test (D-IAT) During Inpatient Treatment and Across a 6-Month Follow-Up Period

Auteurs: Hannah Levy, Kayla Lord, Tyler Rice, Kimberly Sain, Jessica Stubbing, Gretchen Diefenbach, David Tolin

Gepubliceerd in: Cognitive Therapy and Research

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Abstract

Purpose

The Death-Implicit Association Test (D-IAT) was developed to assess implicit cognitions that may indicate a bias towards suicide or death. Although the D-IAT is widely used, little is known about its prospective validity. The current study assessed the prospective validity and treatment sensitivity of the D-IAT in a large sample of inpatients at high risk of suicide. We hypothesized that baseline D-IAT scores would (a) improve from pre- to post- inpatient admission, reflecting a stronger association between self and life; and (b) predict suicidal thoughts and behaviors across a 6-month follow-up period post-discharge.

Methods

Participants were 200 individuals admitted to the psychiatric inpatient unit for suicide risk. They were randomly assigned to receive inpatient treatment as usual (TAU) or brief cognitive-behavioral therapy for suicide prevention (BCBT) and completed the D-IAT before and after treatment and monthly for six months after discharge.

Results

Contrary to our hypotheses, D-IAT scores did not significantly change from pre- to post-admission and did not predict suicidal thoughts or behaviors across the follow-up period, with the exception of aborted attempts.

Conclusions

The findings largely do not support the prospective validity of the D-IAT nor its sensitivity to detect treatment effects, although replication in samples with greater frequency of suicidal behaviors across the follow-up period will be needed.
Literatuur
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Metagegevens
Titel
Predictive Validity and Treatment Sensitivity of the Death-Implicit Association Test (D-IAT) During Inpatient Treatment and Across a 6-Month Follow-Up Period
Auteurs
Hannah Levy
Kayla Lord
Tyler Rice
Kimberly Sain
Jessica Stubbing
Gretchen Diefenbach
David Tolin
Publicatiedatum
22-01-2025
Uitgeverij
Springer US
Gepubliceerd in
Cognitive Therapy and Research
Print ISSN: 0147-5916
Elektronisch ISSN: 1573-2819
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10608-024-10564-z