Keywords

HIV, psychological distress, scale, reliability, validity

 

Authors

  1. Ma, Haiqi MSN, RN
  2. Hu, Zhiguang BA

Abstract

Abstract: Instruments evaluating HIV-related psychological distress (HRPD) in people living with HIV may lack sensitivity to capture patients' psychological burden. We developed a comprehensive scale measuring HRPD and evaluated its psychometric properties. A mixed-method study was conducted from July 2021 to April 2022; it involved a literature review, semistructured interviews (n = 15), three rounds of panel discussions, two rounds of Delphi studies (n = 20), a pilot test (n = 20) to generate new scale items, and a cross-sectional survey (n = 659) to evaluate the psychometric properties of the HIV-related psychological distress scale. The scale contains 22 items across 4 subscales (i.e., disease-related distress, treatment adherence distress, identity distress, and disclosure distress). The confirmatory factor analysis revealed high goodness of fit ([chi]2/df = 2.412, comparative fit index = 0.916, incremental fit index = 0.917, and Tucker[FIGURE DASH]Lewis index = 0.902), showing that the HIV-related psychological distress scale is a reliable (Cronbach's [alpha] = 0.871 overall) and valid scale for evaluating HRPD in China and can be used to dynamically evaluate and monitor HRPD levels during patient follow-up.