Amasya University, Tokat Yolu Üzeri İpekköy, Amasya, Turkey.
Ondokuz Mayıs University, Atakum, Samsun, Turkey.
Assessment. 2023 Jan;30(1):51-72. doi: 10.1177/10731911211039284. Epub 2021 Aug 28.
The Devaluation-Discrimination Scale (DDS) is among the most frequently used stigma scales for measuring the perception of social stigma related to mental illness. The DDS is also frequently employed to test predictions of modified labeling theory and is modified to use for specific disorders, such as depression, substance abuse, and alcohol use disorders. Although modified versions of the DDS have been subjected to psychometric analyses, the original has never undergone a full psychometric evaluation. Thus, the aim of this study was to comprehensively examine the psychometric properties of the Turkish adaptation of the original DDS, with all positively keyed items, across seven studies in Turkish student and community samples ( = 1,907). The results of the exploratory factor analysis indicated that a one-dimensional factor structure adequately explained the covariation among DDS items in a sample of college students. Moreover, the single-factor structure of the DDS was corroborated, and invariant across sex, age, educational level, mental health diagnosis status, and previous help-seeking experience among Turkish adults. The convergent and divergent validity of DDS scores also were supported by significant correlations in the hypothesized directions with self-stigma ( = .26), social stigma ( = .46), attitudes toward seeking professional psychological help ( = -.24), and intention to seek psychological help scores ( = -.24). The results of the reliability analyses suggested that the DDS has good temporal stability in a 1-month time interval ( = .83, intraclass correlation coefficient = .83) and possesses high to excellent internal consistency reliabilities ranging from .88 to .92 across five studies. The examination of the distribution of total DDS scores indicated that there were no floor and ceiling effects in DDS scores across five different samples. The Turkish adaptation of the original DDS may be used as a valid and reliable scale to measure the devaluation and discrimination perceptions of college students and adults against people with mental illness.
去贬值歧视量表(DDS)是用于测量与精神疾病相关的社会污名感知的最常用的污名量表之一。DDS 也常用于测试修正标签理论的预测,并针对特定疾病(如抑郁症、药物滥用和酒精使用障碍)进行修改。尽管 DDS 的修订版本已经经过心理测量学分析,但原始版本从未经过全面的心理测量评估。因此,本研究的目的是在土耳其大学生和社区样本(n = 1,907)的七项研究中,全面检查原始 DDS 的土耳其语适应性的心理测量特性,所有正向关键项目。探索性因素分析的结果表明,在大学生样本中,一个单维因素结构可以充分解释 DDS 项目之间的协变。此外,DDS 的单因素结构在土耳其成年人中得到了证实,且在性别、年龄、教育水平、心理健康诊断状况和先前寻求帮助的经验方面具有不变性。DDS 分数的收敛和发散有效性也得到了支持,与自我污名(r =.26)、社会污名(r =.46)、对寻求专业心理帮助的态度(r = -.24)和寻求心理帮助的意图分数(r = -.24)呈显著的假设方向相关。可靠性分析的结果表明,DDS 在 1 个月的时间间隔内具有良好的时间稳定性(r =.83,组内相关系数 =.83),在五个研究中具有从.88 到.92 的高度到极好的内部一致性信度。对 DDS 总分分布的检验表明,在五个不同样本中,DDS 分数均无地板效应和天花板效应。原始 DDS 的土耳其语适应性可以作为一种有效的、可靠的量表,用于测量大学生和成年人对精神病患者的贬值和歧视感知。