| Literature DB >> 32026079 |
Sandra Adriana Neves Nunes1, Helder Miguel Fernandes2, John Wayne Fisher3,4, Marcos Gimenes Fernandes5.
Abstract
This study had the following aims: (i) to translate the Spiritual Health and Life-Orientation Measure (SHALOM) into Brazilian Portuguese and adapt it to ensure the semantic/conceptual equivalence and content validity of the Brazilian version and (ii) to analyse the psychometric properties-reliability, convergent validity, discriminant validity and factorial validity-of the lived experience component, also called the Spiritual Well-Being Questionnaire (SWBQ), in a calibration sample and in a validation sample of Brazilian adults. The calibration sample comprised 436 subjects, 159 men and 277 women, aged between 18 and 79 years (mean age = 32.20 years; SD = 11.46); the validation study sample comprised 388 subjects, 253 women and 135 men, aged between 18 and 59 years (mean age = 30.59 years; SD = 9.44). All subjects completed a sociodemographic questionnaire, the Brazilian SWBQ and the Psychological Well-being Scale (PWBS). The results provide evidence of the reliability and factorial validity of an oblique four-factor model of a reduced 17-item version but revealed some problems with the convergent validity of the communal and personal factors (average variance extracted < .50). Nonetheless, these results provide evidence that the Brazilian version of the lived experience component of SHALOM (or SWBQb) has good psychometric properties and is a valid method of evaluating the spiritual health of Brazilian adults. Further research is required to establish the convergent and discriminant validity of this reduced version.Entities:
Keywords: Brazilian population; Cross-cultural adaptation; Psychometric properties; Spiritual health
Year: 2018 PMID: 32026079 PMCID: PMC6967285 DOI: 10.1186/s41155-018-0083-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psicol Reflex Crit ISSN: 0102-7972
Absolute goodness-of-fit indices for the SWBQb factors in the calibration sample (N = 436)
| GFI | CFI | RMSEA | AIC | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal | 3.26 | .986 | .982 | .072 | 87.10 |
| Communal | 16.31 | .924 | .850 | .188 | 152.33 |
| Environmental | 1.49 | .993 | .997 | .034 | 27.45 |
| Transcendental | 5.12 | .997 | .982 | .097 | 45.64 |
Absolute goodness-of-fit indices for eight CFA models of the SWBQb in the Brazilian calibration sample (N = 436)
| GFI | CFI | RMSEA (90%IC) | AIC | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1—one-factor model | 9.563 | .663 | .650 | .140 (.134–.147) | 1908.802 |
| Model 2—hierarchical model | 4.13 | .858 | .877 | .085 (.078–.092) | 998.07 |
| Model 3—original orthogonal model | 7.85 | .749 | .725 | .126 (.119–.132) | 1818.71 |
| Model 4—original oblique model | 4.17 | .859 | .877 | .085 (.079–.092) | 1009.418 |
| Model 5—modified oblique model (without items 6, 8 and 9) | 4.227 | .881 | .838 | .086 (.078–.094) | 760.723 |
| Model 6—modified oblique model (without items 6, 8 and 9; correlation between error for items 1–2, 4–5 and 17–19). | 3.370 | .911 | .924 | .074 (.066–.082) | 678.769 |
| Model 7—modified oblique model (without items 8, 9 and 15) | 4.249 | .881 | .897 | .086 (.079–.094) | 763.271 |
| Model 8—modified oblique model (without items 8, 9 and 15; correlation between error for items 1–2, 4–5 and 17–19) | 3.398 | .908 | .926 | .074 (.066–.083) | 678.064 |
Fig. 1Measurement model with 17 items and four factors, confirmed in the validation sample. All saturation values are significant (p < .05)
Cronbach’s alpha and composite reliability coefficients for the original and shortened versions of the SWBQb
| Original version Cronbach’s alpha | Shortened version Cronbach’s alpha | Shortened version composite reliability | |
|---|---|---|---|
| SWBQb | SWBQb-red | SWBQb-red | |
| Communal | .74 | .72 | .71 |
| Personal | .81 | .78 | .80 |
| Environmental | .85 | .86 | .85 |
| Transcendental | .88 | .88 | .87 |
Pearson’s correlations between SWBQb and PWBS dimensions
| PWBS | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SWBQ | PR | AU | EM | PG | PL | SA |
| Communal | .160** | .089 | .154** | .145** | .154** | .156** |
| Personal | .134** | .217** | .252** | .181** | .232** | .229** |
| Transcendental | .111* | .096 | .167** | .093 | .142** | .104* |
| Environmental | .079 | .150** | .181** | .132** | .132** | .138** |
PR positive relations, AU autonomy, EM environmental mastery, PG personal growth, PL purpose in life, SA self-acceptance
*p < .05; **p < .01
Average variance extracted, square root of AVE and matrix of correlations between factors
| Dimension | AVE | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Personal | .47 |
| |||
| 2. Communal | .36 | .92 |
| ||
| 3. Environmental | .55 | .58 | .66 |
| |
| 4. Transcendental | .66 | .66 | .65 | .38 |
|
The values shown in bold are the square root of AVE