| Literature DB >> 32837437 |
Nicholas Tze Ping Pang1, Assis Kamu1, Nurfarah Lydia Binti Hambali1, Ho Chong Mun1, Mohd Amiruddin Kassim1, Noor Hassline Mohamed1, Friska Ayu2, Syed Sharizman Syed Abdul Rahim1, Azizan Omar1, Mohammad Saffree Jeffree1.
Abstract
The newly developed Persian Fear of COVID-19 Scale (FCV-19S) is a seven-item uni-dimensional scale that assesses the severity of fear of COVID-19. A translation and validation of the FCV-19S in the Malay language was expedited due to the severe psychological sequelae of COVID-19 in Malaysia. Formal WHO forward and backward translation sequences were employed in translating the English version into Malay. Malaysian university participants were recruited via convenience sampling online using snowball methods. The reliability and validity properties of the Malay FCV-19S were rigorously psychometrically evaluated (utilising both confirmatory factor analysis and Rasch analysis) in relation to socio-demographic variables and response to the depression, anxiety and stress subscales of the Malay validation of the DASS-21. The sample comprised 228 Malaysian participants. The Cronbach α value for the Malay FCV-19S was 0.893 indicating very good internal reliability. The results of the confirmatory factor analysis showed that the uni-dimensional factor structure of the FCV19S fitted well with the data. The FCV-19S-M was significantly correlated with anxiety (r = 0.481, p < 0.001) and stress (r = 0.389, p < 0.001) subscales of DASS-21. The FCV-19S-M's properties tested using Rasch analysis were also satisfactory. Hence, the Malay FCV-19S is valid and reliable, with robust psychometric properties from classical and modern psychometric methods. It therefore is a highly crucial and timely addition to the psychological toolkit both in operational and research settings in identifying, managing and responding to the psychological distress engendered by COVID-19. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature 2020, corrected publication July/2020.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; COVID-19 fear; Coronavirus; FCV-19S Malay; Fear of COVID-19 scale; Malaysia
Year: 2020 PMID: 32837437 PMCID: PMC7333973 DOI: 10.1007/s11469-020-00355-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Ment Health Addict ISSN: 1557-1874 Impact factor: 3.836
The original English version (Ahorsu et al. 2020) and the Malay version of the FCV-19S
| Item | The original English version | The Malay version |
|---|---|---|
| Item 1 | I am most afraid of COVID-19 | |
| Item 2 | It makes me uncomfortable to think about COVID-19 | |
| Item 3 | My hands become clammy when I think about COVID-19 | |
| Item 4 | I am afraid of losing my life because of COVID-19 | |
| Item 5 | When watching news and stories about COVID-19 on social media, I become nervous or anxious | |
| Item 6 | I cannot sleep because I am worrying about getting COVID-19 | |
| Item 7 | My heart races or palpitates when I think about getting COVID-19 |
The respondents’ background information (n = 228)
| Background | Category | N | % | Mean |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 26 years old | |||
| Age category | 25 years and below | 163 | 71.5% | |
| More than 25 years old | 65 | 28.5% | ||
| Gender | Male | 66 | 28.9% | |
| Female | 162 | 71.1% | ||
| Education level | High school | 22 | 9.6% | |
| Diploma | 61 | 26.8% | ||
| Bachelor degree | 128 | 56.1% | ||
| Master degree | 13 | 5.7% | ||
| Doctoral degree | 4 | 1.8% | ||
| City | Kota Kinabalu | 80 | 35.1% | |
| Others | 148 | 64.9% | ||
| Marital status | Single | 182 | 79.8% | |
| Married | 44 | 19.3% | ||
| Divorced | 2 | 0.9% |
Descriptive statistics of the Malay version of the fear of COVID-19 scale (n = 228)
| Item | N | Minimum | Maximum | Mean | Std. deviation | Skewness | Kurtosis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item 1 | 228 | 1 | 5 | 3.45 | 1.096 | −0.302 | −0.537 |
| Item 2 | 228 | 1 | 5 | 3.19 | 1.155 | −0.253 | −0.631 |
| Item 3 | 228 | 1 | 5 | 1.8 | 0.959 | 0.808 | −0.494 |
| Item 4 | 228 | 1 | 5 | 3.35 | 1.216 | −0.3 | −0.795 |
| Item 5 | 228 | 1 | 5 | 2.8 | 1.203 | −0.049 | −0.939 |
| Item 6 | 228 | 1 | 5 | 1.81 | 0.979 | 1.05 | 0.508 |
| Item 7 | 228 | 1 | 5 | 1.96 | 1.055 | 0.874 | 0.068 |
The item–item correlation matrix (n = 228)
| Item | Item 1 | Item 2 | Item 3 | Item 4 | Item 5 | Item 6 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item 2 | .649** | |||||
| Item 3 | .356** | .408** | ||||
| Item 4 | .694** | .602** | .359** | |||
| Item 5 | .627** | .633** | .465** | .687** | ||
| Item 6 | .402** | .422** | .690** | .434** | .539** | |
| Item 7 | .420** | .480** | .693** | .485** | .601** | .799** |
**Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed)
The corrected item–total correlation (n = 228)
| Item | Corrected item–total correlation | Item exclusion or retention |
|---|---|---|
| Item 1 | 0.678 | Retained |
| Item 2 | 0.682 | Retained |
| Item 3 | 0.608 | Retained |
| Item 4 | 0.701 | Retained |
| Item 5 | 0.768 | Retained |
| Item 6 | 0.682 | Retained |
| Item 7 | 0.727 | Retained |
Psychometric properties for the Malay version of the fear of COVID-19 scale at the scale level (n = 228)
| Psychometric method | Psychometric measure | Result | Suggested cut-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| CTT | Internal consistency measure using Cronbach’s alpha | 0.893 | > 0.7 |
| Internal consistency measure using McDonald’s omega | 0.894 | > 0.7 | |
| Internal consistency measure using greatest lower bound | 0.911 | > 0.7 | |
| Test-retest reliability | 0.971** | See Note | |
| Average variance extracted (AVE) | 0.411 | > 0.5 | |
| Composite reliability | 0.799 | > 0.7 | |
| Concurrent validity (fear of COVID-19 scale versus depression scale) | 0.344** | See Note | |
| Concurrent validity (fear of COVID-19 scale versus anxiety scale) | 0.481** | See Note | |
| Concurrent validity (fear of COVID-19 scale versus stress scale) | 0.389** | See Note | |
| RMT | Item separation reliability | 0.983 | > 0.7 |
| Item separation index | 7.560 | > 2 | |
| Person separation reliability | 0.745 | > 0.7 | |
| Person separation index | 1.703 | > 2 |
**Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (two-tailed test)
Note: Correlation coefficients of <0.25 were considered as small; 0.25–0.50 as moderate; 0.50–0.75 as good; and >0.75 as excellent
Psychometric properties of Malay version of the fear of COVID-19 scale at the item level (n = 228)
| Item | Factor loading* | Communalities | Infit MnSq | Outfit MnSq | Difficulty | DIF contrast across genderab |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item 1 | 0.865 | 0.778 | 0.87 | 0.89 | −0.62 | −0.07 |
| Item 2 | 0.792 | 0.698 | 0.84 | 0.81 | −0.44 | −0.20 |
| Item 3 | 0.196 | 0.773 | 1.38 | 1.30 | 0.99 | −0.11 |
| Item 4 | 0.845 | 0.766 | 0.83 | 0.76 | −0.68 | −0.19 |
| Item 5 | 0.753 | 0.740 | 0.90 | 0.85 | −0.16 | 0.13 |
| Item 6 | 0.265 | 0.839 | 1.10 | 1.05 | 0.55 | −0.22 |
| Item 7 | 0.332 | 0.845 | 1.07 | 1.02 | 0.36 | −0.14 |
MnSq, mean square error; DIF, differential item functioning.
*Extraction method: Oblimin rotation with Kaiser normalization
aDIF contrast >0.5 indicates substantial DIF
bDIF contrast across gender = difficulty for males (reference group) – difficulty for females (focal group). Positive values indicate items that are differentially easier for the focal group than the reference group. Negative values indicate items that are differentially harder for the focal group than the reference group