Background: The Discrimination and Stigma Scale (DISC) is a patient-reported outcome measure which assesses experiences of discrimination among persons with a mental illness globally. Methods: This study evaluated whether the psychometric properties of a short-form version, DISC-Ultra Short (DISCUS) (11-item), could be replicated in a sample of people with a wide range of mental disorders from 21 sites in 15 countries/territories, across six global regions. The frequency of experienced discrimination was reported. Scaling assumptions (confirmatory factor analysis, inter-item and item-total correlations), reliability (internal consistency) and validity (convergent validity, known groups method) were investigated in each region, and by diagnosis group. Results: 1195 people participated. The most frequently reported experiences of discrimination were being shunned or avoided at work (48.7%) and discrimination in making or keeping friends (47.2%). Confirmatory factor analysis supported a unidimensional model across all six regions and five diagnosis groups. Convergent validity was confirmed in the total sample and within all regions [ Internalised Stigma of Mental Illness (ISMI-10): 0.28-0.67, stopping self: 0.54-0.72, stigma consciousness: -0.32-0.57], as was internal consistency reliability (α = 0.74-0.84). Known groups validity was established in the global sample with levels of experienced discrimination significantly higher for those experiencing higher depression [Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)-2: p < 0.001], lower mental wellbeing [Warwick-Edinburgh Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): p < 0.001], higher suicidal ideation [Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS)-4: p < 0.001] and higher risk of suicidal behaviour [Suicidal Ideation Attributes Scale (SIDAS): p < 0.001]. Conclusions: The DISCUS is a reliable and valid unidimensional measure of experienced discrimination for use in global settings with similar properties to the longer DISC. It offers a brief assessment of experienced discrimination for use in clinical and research settings.

Measuring discrimination experienced by people with a mental illness: replication of the short-form DISCUS in six world regions / Brohan, Elaine; Thornicroft, Graham; Rüsch, Nicolas; Lasalvia, Antonio; Campbell, Megan M; Yalçınkaya-Alkar, Özden; Lanfredi, Mariangela; Ochoa, Susana; Üçok, Alp; Tomás, Catarina; Fadipe, Babatunde; Sebes, Julia; Fiorillo, Andrea; Sampogna, Gaia; Paula, Cristiane Silvestre; Valverde, Leonidas; Schomerus, Georg; Klemm, Pia; Ouali, Uta; Castelein, Stynke; Alexová, Aneta; Oexle, Nathalie; Guimarães, Patrícia Neves; Sportel, Bouwina Esther; Chang, Chih-Cheng; Li, Jie; Shanthi, Chilasagaram; Reneses, Blanca; Bakolis, Ioannis; Evans-Lacko, Sara. - In: PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE. - ISSN 0033-2917. - STAMPA. - 53:9(2023), pp. 3963-3973. [10.1017/S0033291722000630]

Measuring discrimination experienced by people with a mental illness: replication of the short-form DISCUS in six world regions

Lasalvia, Antonio;
2023-01-01

Abstract

Background: The Discrimination and Stigma Scale (DISC) is a patient-reported outcome measure which assesses experiences of discrimination among persons with a mental illness globally. Methods: This study evaluated whether the psychometric properties of a short-form version, DISC-Ultra Short (DISCUS) (11-item), could be replicated in a sample of people with a wide range of mental disorders from 21 sites in 15 countries/territories, across six global regions. The frequency of experienced discrimination was reported. Scaling assumptions (confirmatory factor analysis, inter-item and item-total correlations), reliability (internal consistency) and validity (convergent validity, known groups method) were investigated in each region, and by diagnosis group. Results: 1195 people participated. The most frequently reported experiences of discrimination were being shunned or avoided at work (48.7%) and discrimination in making or keeping friends (47.2%). Confirmatory factor analysis supported a unidimensional model across all six regions and five diagnosis groups. Convergent validity was confirmed in the total sample and within all regions [ Internalised Stigma of Mental Illness (ISMI-10): 0.28-0.67, stopping self: 0.54-0.72, stigma consciousness: -0.32-0.57], as was internal consistency reliability (α = 0.74-0.84). Known groups validity was established in the global sample with levels of experienced discrimination significantly higher for those experiencing higher depression [Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ)-2: p < 0.001], lower mental wellbeing [Warwick-Edinburgh Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): p < 0.001], higher suicidal ideation [Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS)-4: p < 0.001] and higher risk of suicidal behaviour [Suicidal Ideation Attributes Scale (SIDAS): p < 0.001]. Conclusions: The DISCUS is a reliable and valid unidimensional measure of experienced discrimination for use in global settings with similar properties to the longer DISC. It offers a brief assessment of experienced discrimination for use in clinical and research settings.
2023
9
Brohan, Elaine; Thornicroft, Graham; Rüsch, Nicolas; Lasalvia, Antonio; Campbell, Megan M; Yalçınkaya-Alkar, Özden; Lanfredi, Mariangela; Ochoa, Susan...espandi
Measuring discrimination experienced by people with a mental illness: replication of the short-form DISCUS in six world regions / Brohan, Elaine; Thornicroft, Graham; Rüsch, Nicolas; Lasalvia, Antonio; Campbell, Megan M; Yalçınkaya-Alkar, Özden; Lanfredi, Mariangela; Ochoa, Susana; Üçok, Alp; Tomás, Catarina; Fadipe, Babatunde; Sebes, Julia; Fiorillo, Andrea; Sampogna, Gaia; Paula, Cristiane Silvestre; Valverde, Leonidas; Schomerus, Georg; Klemm, Pia; Ouali, Uta; Castelein, Stynke; Alexová, Aneta; Oexle, Nathalie; Guimarães, Patrícia Neves; Sportel, Bouwina Esther; Chang, Chih-Cheng; Li, Jie; Shanthi, Chilasagaram; Reneses, Blanca; Bakolis, Ioannis; Evans-Lacko, Sara. - In: PSYCHOLOGICAL MEDICINE. - ISSN 0033-2917. - STAMPA. - 53:9(2023), pp. 3963-3973. [10.1017/S0033291722000630]
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
measuring-discrimination-experienced-by-people-with-a-mental-illness-replication-of-the-short-form-discus-in-six-world-regions.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Versione editoriale (Publisher’s layout)
Licenza: Creative commons
Dimensione 414.95 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
414.95 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11572/455339
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 6
  • Scopus 11
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 11
  • OpenAlex 12
social impact