TY - JOUR
T1 - Stigma towards people with tuberculosis
T2 - a cross-cultural adaptation and validation of a scale in Indonesia
AU - Fuady, Ahmad
AU - Arifin, Bustanul
AU - Yunita, Ferdiana
AU - Rauf, Saidah
AU - Fitriangga, Agus
AU - Sugiharto, Agus
AU - Yani, Finny Fitry
AU - Nasution, Helmi Suryani
AU - Putra, IWayan Gede Artawan Eka
AU - Mansyur, Muchtaruddin
AU - Wingfield, Tom
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023. The Author(s).
PY - 2023/4/13
Y1 - 2023/4/13
N2 - INTRODUCTION: Tuberculosis (TB) remains a highly stigmatised disease that can cause or exacerbate mental health disorders. Despite increased awareness of the importance of reducing TB stigma, validated tools to measure TB stigma remain scarce. This study aimed to culturally adapt and validate the Van Rie TB Stigma Scale in Indonesia, a country with the second largest TB incidence worldwide. METHODS: We validated the scale in three phases: translation, cultural adaptation, and psychometric evaluation. We invited diverse experts to an interdisciplinary panel for the cross-cultural adaptation, then performed a psychometric evaluation of the scale: exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses, reliability analysis, and correlation analysis with Patient Health Questionnaire 9 [PHQ-9]. RESULTS: We culturally adapted the original scale's language and content during the translation and cultural adaptation phases. After psychometric evaluation with 401 participants in seven provinces of Indonesia, we removed two items. The new scale had two forms: (A) patient and (B) community perspective forms. Both forms had good internal consistency, with respective Cronbach's alpha values of 0.738 and 0.807. We identified three loading factors in Form A (disclosure, isolation, and guilty) and two loading factors in Form B (isolation and distancing). The scale showed correlation with PHQ-9 (Form A, rs = 0.347, p < 0.001; Form B, rs = 0). CONCLUSIONS: The culturally adapted Indonesian version of Van Rie's TB Stigma Scale is comprehensive, reliable, internally consistent, and valid. The scale is now ready for applied scale-up in research and practice to measure TB-stigma and evaluate the impact of TB-stigma reduction interventions in Indonesia.
AB - INTRODUCTION: Tuberculosis (TB) remains a highly stigmatised disease that can cause or exacerbate mental health disorders. Despite increased awareness of the importance of reducing TB stigma, validated tools to measure TB stigma remain scarce. This study aimed to culturally adapt and validate the Van Rie TB Stigma Scale in Indonesia, a country with the second largest TB incidence worldwide. METHODS: We validated the scale in three phases: translation, cultural adaptation, and psychometric evaluation. We invited diverse experts to an interdisciplinary panel for the cross-cultural adaptation, then performed a psychometric evaluation of the scale: exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses, reliability analysis, and correlation analysis with Patient Health Questionnaire 9 [PHQ-9]. RESULTS: We culturally adapted the original scale's language and content during the translation and cultural adaptation phases. After psychometric evaluation with 401 participants in seven provinces of Indonesia, we removed two items. The new scale had two forms: (A) patient and (B) community perspective forms. Both forms had good internal consistency, with respective Cronbach's alpha values of 0.738 and 0.807. We identified three loading factors in Form A (disclosure, isolation, and guilty) and two loading factors in Form B (isolation and distancing). The scale showed correlation with PHQ-9 (Form A, rs = 0.347, p < 0.001; Form B, rs = 0). CONCLUSIONS: The culturally adapted Indonesian version of Van Rie's TB Stigma Scale is comprehensive, reliable, internally consistent, and valid. The scale is now ready for applied scale-up in research and practice to measure TB-stigma and evaluate the impact of TB-stigma reduction interventions in Indonesia.
KW - Indonesia
KW - Scale
KW - Stigma
KW - Tool
KW - Tuberculosis
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85152424972&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1186/s40359-023-01161-y
DO - 10.1186/s40359-023-01161-y
M3 - Article
C2 - 37055814
AN - SCOPUS:85152424972
SN - 2050-7283
VL - 11
SP - 112
JO - BMC psychology
JF - BMC psychology
IS - 1
M1 - 112
ER -