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Volume 30, Number 3—March 2024
Research

Systematic Review of Scales for Measuring Infectious Disease–Related Stigma

Amy PatersonComments to Author , Ashleigh Cheyne, Benjamin Jones, Stefan Schilling, Louise Sigfrid, Jeni Stolow, Lina Moses, Piero Olliaro, and Amanda Rojek
Author affiliations: University of Oxford, Oxford, UK (A. Paterson, A. Cheyne, B. Jones, S. Schilling, L. Sigfrid, P. Olliaro, A. Rojek); Tulane University, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA (J. Stolow, L. Moses); Global Outbreak Alert and Response Network, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland (J. Stolow, L. Moses); The Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (A. Rojek)

Main Article

Table 2

Definitions of psychometric properties used in a systematic review of scales for measuring infectious disease–related stigma*

Domain Property Aspect of property Definition
Validity The degree to which an instrument measures the constructs it purports to measure
Content validity The degree to which the content of an instrument is an adequate reflection of the construct to be measured
Face validity The degree to which an instrument looks as though it reflects the construct to be measured
Construct validity The degree to which the scores of an instrument are consistent with hypotheses (for instance regarding internal relationships, relationships to scores of other instruments, or differences between relevant groups) based on the assumption that the instrument validly measures the construct to be measured
Structural validity The degree to which the scores of an instrument are an adequate reflection of the dimensionality of the construct to be measured
Hypotheses testing The degree to which the scores of an instrument are consistent with hypotheses on relationships to scores of other instruments
Cross-cultural validity The degree to which an instrument accurately measures the same construct in different population groups.

Criterion validity†

The degree to which the scores of an instrument are an adequate reflection of a gold standard*
Reliability The degree to which the measurement is free from measurement error
Internal consistency The degree of the interrelatedness among the items
Test-retest reliability The amount of the total variance in two sets of measurements which is due to 'true’ differences between respondents

Measurement error

The systematic and random error of a respondent's score that is not attributed to true changes in the construct to be measured
Responsiveness The ability of an instrument to detect change over time in the construct to be measured

*Table adapted from COSMIN definitions of domains, measurement properties, and aspects of measurement properties, which uses the term “gold standard” (21). †Criterion validity assessment was not considered in this review because no standard for stigma assessment is available.

Main Article

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Page created: December 31, 2023
Page updated: February 22, 2024
Page reviewed: February 22, 2024
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