Abstract. The Flensburg health psychology group takes a salutogenic perspective and aims at developing innovative health promotion approaches. It stands in the interdisciplinary context of health and educational sciences. Our focus in research is on both, stress processes and lay representations of health and illness in the context of salutogenic theories of health. Basic and applied research activities aim at developing subject-oriented approaches of prevention and health promotion that are designed to promote health resources and competencies in selected settings and target groups. Current research is concentrated on socially disadvantaged groups, on occupational groups and on men to develop tailored health promotion approaches that reach groups in need and which show sustainable effects.
Two problems concerning the IMPS are revealed. First, the importance of an appropriate reliability measure is demonstrated in a sample of 124 inpatients. Widely divergent results are found using three different intraclass correlation coefficients. The one producing the highest results was used by Klett and McNair (1966) and by Behrends et al. (1971). However, the results from this measure only apply to certain types of investigation. A measure more applicable to most investigations in psychiatric research (the intraclass correlation coefficient of individual ratings with between-rater variance included) produced results that were clearly lower, although still acceptable, with an average correlation of 0.72 between the 12 scales. Secondly, the multiplication of item scores by 2 or 8 when forming the scale scores is shown to lead to unusual and undesirable scale distributions in a sample of 1932 inpatients. The resulting implications for assessing change scores on some of the IMPS scales are discussed.
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