Clin Psychopharmacol Neurosci.  2024 Nov;22(4):669-678. 10.9758/cpn.24.1208.

Psychometric Properties of Korean Version of Nonsuicidal Self-injury Inventory: Validation Study of Deliberate Self-harm Inventory

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Psychiatry, Wonkwang University Hospital, Iksan, Korea
  • 2Korea Brain-Behavior Mental Health Institute, Iksan, Korea
  • 3Department of Psychiatry, Wonkwang University School of Medicine, Iksan, Korea
  • 4Department of Public Health, Graduate School of Wonkwang University, Iksan, Korea
  • 5Didim Psychiatric Clinic, Seoul, Korea
  • 6Department of Medicine, Graduate School of Wonkwang University, Iksan, Korea

Abstract


Objective
This study aimed to develop a Korean version of the Nonsuicidal Self-injury Inventory (K-NSSI) through the Deliberate Self-harm Inventory (DSHI) developed by Gratz for the Korean context and confirm its reliability and validity for clinical application.
Methods
A total of 188 participants were analyzed utilizing the DSHI, the Korean version of the Self-harm Inventory, the Personality Assessment Inventory-Borderline Features (PAI-BOR), and the DSM-5 Level-2-Depression scale (Level-2-Dep). Cronbach’s α assessed their reliability, while frequency analysis examined the items of the K-NSSI scales. Validity of the K-NSSI was confirmed through correlation analyses between K-NSSI (tendency for and frequency of nonsuicidal self-injury [NSSI] behavior) and SHI, PAI-BOR total scale, four subscales of PAI-BOR, and Level-2-Dep scale. Polyserial correlations analyzed the correlation between the presence of NSSI behavior and other scales. Confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modeling explored the relationship between borderline personality features and self-harm.
Results
Cronbach’s α was 0.71, indicating an “acceptable” level of reliability. Statistically significant correlations were observed between the presence of NSSI behavior and the total scores of SHI and PAI-BOR, and the four subscales of PAI-BOR. The frequency of NSSI showed statistically significant correlations with the total score of SHI and PAI-BOR, and its four subscales. Notably, 13.8% of participants reported engaging in self-harm behaviors, 26.9% reported a single occurrence, and 73.1% reported two or more instances. Structural equation modeling demonstrated that self-harm adequately predicted borderline personality traits.
Conclusion
This study successfully validated the adaptation of DSHI into K-NSSI. The K-NSSI can facilitate interventions for self-harm incidents.

Keyword

Nonsuicidal self-injury; Self-harm scale; Deliberate self-harm scale; Scale validation; Self-injurious behavior
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