A Donnelly1,2, A O'Reilly1, L Dolphin1,3, L O'Keeffe1,4, J Moore1. 1. The National Centre for Youth Mental Health, Ireland. 2. Acquired Brain Injury Ireland, Ireland. 3. HIQA, Ireland. 4. Educational Research Centre, Ireland.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Mental health is regarded as more than the absence of mental health difficulties, with clinical and research focus moving towards measurement of well-being. The Mental Health Continuum-Short Form (MHC-SF) was developed to assess overall and emotional, social and psychological well-being. Little is known about the use of the MHC-SF with young people engaging with mental health services. The current pilot study sought to examine the performance of the MHC-SF in an Irish primary care youth mental health service for 12-25 year olds. METHODS: A sample of 229 young people (female n=143; male n=85, unknown n=1) aged 12-24 years (M=15.87, SD=2.51) who completed the MHC-SF prior to commencing their first intervention session in Jigsaw participated in this study. The psychometric properties of the MHC-SF were investigated using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and Cronbach's alpha for internal consistency. RESULTS: CFA supported the three-factor structure of the MHC-SF for emotional, social, and psychological well-being, and very good internal consistency was observed. CONCLUSION: Findings provide evidence for the psychometric properties of the MHC-SF in a primary care youth mental health setting, and suggest that the MHC-SF's three-factor structure is valid for use in this context. Limitations and recommendations for future research are discussed.
OBJECTIVES: Mental health is regarded as more than the absence of mental health difficulties, with clinical and research focus moving towards measurement of well-being. The Mental Health Continuum-Short Form (MHC-SF) was developed to assess overall and emotional, social and psychological well-being. Little is known about the use of the MHC-SF with young people engaging with mental health services. The current pilot study sought to examine the performance of the MHC-SF in an Irish primary care youth mental health service for 12-25 year olds. METHODS: A sample of 229 young people (female n=143; male n=85, unknown n=1) aged 12-24 years (M=15.87, SD=2.51) who completed the MHC-SF prior to commencing their first intervention session in Jigsaw participated in this study. The psychometric properties of the MHC-SF were investigated using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and Cronbach's alpha for internal consistency. RESULTS:CFA supported the three-factor structure of the MHC-SF for emotional, social, and psychological well-being, and very good internal consistency was observed. CONCLUSION: Findings provide evidence for the psychometric properties of the MHC-SF in a primary care youth mental health setting, and suggest that the MHC-SF's three-factor structure is valid for use in this context. Limitations and recommendations for future research are discussed.
Entities:
Keywords:
MHC-SF; primary care; psychometric properties; youth mental health service
Authors: Cara A Settipani; Lisa D Hawke; Kristin Cleverley; Gloria Chaim; Amy Cheung; Kamna Mehra; Maureen Rice; Peter Szatmari; Joanna Henderson Journal: Int J Ment Health Syst Date: 2019-07-23
Authors: Chantie C Luijten; Sofie Kuppens; Daphne van de Bongardt; Anna P Nieboer Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes Date: 2019-10-22 Impact factor: 3.186