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Cross-Cultural Validation of the Perceptions of Stigmatization by Others for Seeking Help (PSOSH) Scale

Vogel, David L.; Heath, Patrick J.; Engel, Kelsey E.; Brenner, Rachel E.; Strass, Haley A.; Armstrong, Patrick I.; Galbraith, Victoria; Gonçalves, Marta; Mackenzie, Corey; Rubin, Mark; Wang, Ying Fen; Al-Darmaki, Fatima Rashed; Galbraith, Niall; Baptista, Makilim Nunes; Liao, Hsin Ya; Mak, Winnie W.S.; Topkaya, Nursel; Zlati, Alina

Authors

David L. Vogel

Patrick J. Heath

Kelsey E. Engel

Rachel E. Brenner

Haley A. Strass

Patrick I. Armstrong

Victoria Galbraith

Marta Gonçalves

Corey Mackenzie

Ying Fen Wang

Fatima Rashed Al-Darmaki

Niall Galbraith

Makilim Nunes Baptista

Hsin Ya Liao

Winnie W.S. Mak

Nursel Topkaya

Alina Zlati



Abstract

Social network stigma refers to the perceived negative views about seeking help for mental health problems that are held by those closest to an individual, such as family and friends. This form of stigma predicts help-seeking attitudes and intentions beyond other forms of stigma, and is predominantly measured using the Perceptions of Stigmatization by Others for Seeking Help scale (PSOSH; Vogel, Wade, & Ascheman, 2009). However, the PSOSH was normed using samples from the United States and, until the cross-cultural validity of this measure is established, it cannot reliably be used within other countries (Miller & Sheu, 2008). As such, the current study (N = 3,440) examined the cross-cultural measurement invariance of the PSOSH using the sequential constraint imposition approach across 11 countries/regions: Australia, Brazil, Canada, Hong Kong, Portugal, Romania, Taiwan, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the United Kingdom (U.K.), and the United States (U.S.). Overall, findings indicate that the PSOSH measures a meaningful construct (i.e., configural and metric invariance) across the 11 countries/regions and that future cross-cultural research could use the PSOSH to examine relationships between social network stigma and other variables. Scalar invariance results also supported the examination of mean differences in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Portugal, Turkey, the U.K., and the U.S., but not in Hong Kong, Romania, Taiwan, and UAE. Implications for future cross-cultural research are discussed.

Citation

Vogel, D. L., Heath, P. J., Engel, K. E., Brenner, R. E., Strass, H. A., Armstrong, P. I., Galbraith, V., Gonçalves, M., Mackenzie, C., Rubin, M., Wang, Y. F., Al-Darmaki, F. R., Galbraith, N., Baptista, M. N., Liao, H. Y., Mak, W. W., Topkaya, N., & Zlati, A. (2019). Cross-Cultural Validation of the Perceptions of Stigmatization by Others for Seeking Help (PSOSH) Scale. Stigma and Health, 4(1), 82-85. https://doi.org/10.1037/sah0000119

Journal Article Type Article
Publication Date Jan 1, 2019
Deposit Date Mar 3, 2025
Journal Stigma and Health
Print ISSN 2376-6972
Electronic ISSN 2376-6964
Publisher American Psychological Association
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 4
Issue 1
Pages 82-85
DOI https://doi.org/10.1037/sah0000119
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3670241
Related Public URLs https://wlv.openrepository.com/handle/2436/620865