Examining the psychometric properties of a refined perceived stress scale during the COVID-19 pandemic.

IF 0.9 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community Pub Date : 2021-04-01 Epub Date: 2021-04-15 DOI:10.1080/10852352.2021.1908873
Jacob M Eubank, Kate G Burt, John Orazem
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) measures general life stress and the Impact of Events Scale (IES) measures retrospective stress from a specific event; both have been validated across various audiences and settings. However, neither measure stress during an evolving public health crisis. The aim was to refine the PSS to measure stress during an event (e.g. COVID-19 pandemic) and examine its psychometric properties within a 4-year Hispanic-Serving Institution in the Bronx, NY. Three items from the IES were added to and one PSS item was removed from the PSS-10, creating a new PSS-12. Cronbach's α for the scale was 0.902 for faculty and 0.903 for students, indicating high internal consistency. Factor analyses also supported calculation of two subtotals similarly across groups. The PSS-12 is a valid instrument to measure perceived stress during a public health crisis, particularly among populations that already experience community health disparities.

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在COVID-19大流行期间检查改进的感知压力量表的心理测量特性。
感知压力量表(PSS)测量一般生活压力,事件影响量表(IES)测量来自特定事件的回顾性压力;两者都在不同的受众和环境中得到了验证。然而,在不断演变的公共卫生危机中,这两种方法都无法衡量压力。目的是改进PSS以测量事件(例如COVID-19大流行)期间的压力,并在纽约州布朗克斯的一家4年制西班牙裔服务机构中检查其心理测量特性。从IES中添加了三个项目,从PSS-10中删除了一个PSS项目,创建了一个新的PSS-12。量表中教师的Cronbach’s α为0.902,学生的Cronbach’s α为0.903,内部一致性较高。因子分析也支持了两组小计的计算。PSS-12是衡量公共卫生危机期间感知压力的有效工具,特别是在已经经历社区健康差距的人群中。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: The Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Communityis on the cutting edge of social action and change, not only covering current thought and developments, but also defining future directions in the field. Under the editorship of Joseph R. Ferrari since 1995, Prevention in Human Services was retitled as the Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Communityto reflect its focus of providing professionals with information on the leading, effective programs for community intervention and prevention of problems. Because of its intensive coverage of selected topics and the sheer length of each issue, the Journal of Prevention & Intervention in the Community is the first-and in many cases, primary-source of information for mental health and human services development.
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