4.2 Article

Using Item Response Theory to Develop Revised (SSOSH-7) and Ultra-Brief (SSOSH-3) Self-Stigma of Seeking Help Scales

Journal

ASSESSMENT
Volume 28, Issue 5, Pages 1488-1499

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1073191120958496

Keywords

self-stigma; Self-Stigma of Seeking Help scale; help seeking; item response theory; mental health stigma

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The study developed ultra-brief (SSOSH-3) and revised (SSOSH-7) versions of the Self-Stigma of Seeking Help scale. Three reverse-scored items were removed to create the SSOSH-7, while the three most informative items were retained for the SSOSH-3. Both versions showed evidence of internal consistency and significant correlations with help-seeking constructs across samples.
The current research developed ultra-brief (SSOSH-3) and revised (SSOSH-7) versions of the Self-Stigma of Seeking Help scale. Item response theory was used to examine the amount of information each item provided across the latent variable scale and test whether items functioned differently across women and men. In a sample of 857 community adults, results supported removal of three reverse-scored items to create the SSOSH-7. The three most informative items were retained to create the SSOSH-3. Differential item functioning testing supported the use of both versions across women and men. Results replicated in an undergraduate student sample (n= 661). In both samples, the SSOSH-3 (alpha s = .82-.87) and SSOSH-7 (alpha s = .87-.89) demonstrated evidence of internal consistency. The SSOSH-3 (rs >= .89) and SSOSH-7 (rs >= .97) were highly correlated with the original SSOSH across samples and demonstrated significant correlations with help-seeking constructs and in similar magnitude to the original SSOSH.

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