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Re-examination of the Family Law Detection of Overall Risk Screen (FL-DOORS): establishing fitness for purpose

journal contribution
posted on 2018-08-01, 00:00 authored by Yvonne Wells, Jamie Lee, Xia Li, Evelyn Tan, Jennifer Mcintosh
Conflicted parental separation is associated with escalating risks to wellbeing and safety for all family members. The Family Law DOORS (FL-DOORS, Detection Of Overall Risk Screen) is a three-part framework designed to assist frontline workers to identify, evaluate, and respond to these risks in separated families. The FL-DOORS system includes a 10-domain parent self-report screening measure, covering child and parent wellbeing, cultural and social risks, and safety risks experienced by and initiated by each parent. A first validation study of this screen was conducted with the first 660 separated parents to complete the measure at a frontline community agency, and found robust psychometric properties (McIntosh, Wells, & Lee, 2016). This paper presents a revalidation study of FL-DOORS screening measure with a new cohort of 5,429 separated parents, including 1,642 pairs. Our aim was to evaluate whether FL-DOORS was fit for the purpose of indicating a range of safety and wellbeing risks in separated families. We repeated internal scale reliability and concurrent and external criterion validity analyses. Original subscales were largely confirmed, and validity analyses were extended through a Multi-Trait Multi-Method (MTMM) approach. In this second larger cohort, the FL-DOORS screen was again found fit-for-purpose as an indicator of domestic violence and wellbeing risks in separated families. (PsycINFO Database Record

History

Journal

Psychological assessment

Volume

30

Issue

8

Pagination

1121 - 1126

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Location

Washington, D.C.

ISSN

1040-3590

eISSN

1939-134X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, American Psychological Association

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