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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Mar 20.
Published in final edited form as: Addiction. 2011 Sep;106(9):1588–1602. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2011.03482.x

Table 5. Correlations between ASI-6 Recent Status Scales and External Validity Measures (n=252).

External Validity Measures*

Scales SF-12 Physical SAS-SR Workb SIP SIP-D CPI-So Prior arrestsa SAS-SR Social SCL-10R SF-12 Mental
Medical -.64 .11 .15 .19 -.23 .00 .18 .44 -.34
Employment -.13 .76 -.06 -.03 -.14 .14 .02 .00 .02
Alcohol -.07 -.04 .68 .01 -.11 -.17 .21 .29 -.22
Drug -.13 -.14 -.14 .61 -.17 .02 .18 .30 -.27
Legal .08 -.06 -.04 .28 -.14 .15 .09 .09 -.09
Family/Social Problems -.16 -.13 .17 .25 -.21 -.12 .40 .36 -.36
Family/Social Support -.06 -.09 -.15 .00 .11 -.03 -.34 -.12 .01
Child Problems .04 -.04 -.13 .12 -.07 -.12 -.04 .15 -.16
Psychiatric -.24 .00 .26 .37 -.34 -.14 .44 .68 -.61
*

Higher scores on the SAS-SR, SIP, SIP-D, Prior arrests, and SCL-10R indicate more problems.

Higher scores on the SF-12 and CPI-So indicate fewer problems.

a

number of arrests in prior two years

b

employed vs. not employed

Bold indicates correlations between ASI-6 RSSs and their corresponding validity measure(s)