Objective: Most
studies that have investigated the symptom dimensions of schizophrenia
utilizing the Scale for the Assessment of Positive Symptoms (SAPS) and the
Scale for the Assessment of Negative Symptoms (SANS), both global rating
scales, favored a 3-factor model. Only a few studies have examined the factor
structure at the item level and they suggest a wider dimensional structure. The
factor structure of schizophrenic symptoms has not been previously studied in
Turkey, nor has the construct validity of these scales. The present study
sought to determine the factor structure of the independent items and the
construct validity of the scales.
Method: The
study included 180 schizophrenia patients (diagnoses based on DSM-IV criteria).
The standard statistical methods of principal component analysis (PCA) and
varimax rotation were used to extract factors.
Results: PCA of
the global items yielded a 3-factor solution, representing positive, negative,
and disorganization dimensions. Item-level factor analysis revealed 12 factors:
Psychomotor poverty, positive formal thought disorder, auditory/visual
hallucinations, social and occupational dysfunction, bizarre delusions,
attention/stereotypy, paranoid features, somatic hallucinations/delusions,
appearance, grandiose/religious delusions, inappropriate affect, and delusions
of jealousy.
Conclusion:
Consistent with previous studies, neither the global nor the item-level factor
structures supported the simple positive-negative dichotomy or the composition
of the sub-scales; therefore, future studies should make use of the single
items, especially when positive symptoms are being studied.