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The Mental Vulnerability Questionnaire: A psychometric evaluation
Authors:LENE FALGAARD EPLOV  JANNE PETERSEN  TORBEN JøRGENSEN  CHRISTOFFER JOHANSEN  MORTEN BIRKET‐SMITH  ANN CHRISTINE LYNGBERG  ERIK LYKKE MORTENSEN
Institution:1. Research Unit for Psychiatric Rehabilitation, Mental Health Center Ballerup, Ballerup;2. Research Centre for Prevention and Health, Copenhagen University Hospital Glostrup, Glostrup;3. Clinical ReUnit, Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Hvidovre;4. The Danish Cansociety, Institute of Cancer Epidemiology, Copenhagen;5. Liaison Psychiatric Unit, Mental Health Center Copenhagen, Copenhagen;6. Department of Health Psychology, Institute of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen
Abstract:Eplov, L.F., Petersen, J., Jørgensen, T., Johansen, C., Birket‐Smith, M., Lyngberg, A. C. & Mortensen, E. L. (2010). The Mental Vulnerability Questionnaire: A psychometric evaluation. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology 51, 548–554. The Mental Vulnerability Questionnaire was originally a 22 item scale, later reduced to a 12 item scale. In population studies the 12 item scale has been a significant predictor of health and illness. The scale has not been psychometrically evaluated for more than 30 years, and the aim of the present study was both to evaluate the psychometric properties of the 22 and 12 item scales and of three new scales. The main study sample was a community sample comprising more than 6,000 men and women. In this sample the coefficients of homogeneity were all over 0.30 for the three new scales, but below 0.30 for the 12 and the 22 item scales. All five Mental Vulnerability scales had positively skewed score distributions which were associated significantly with both SCL‐90‐R symptom scores and NEO‐PI‐R personality scales (primarily Neuroticism and Extraversion). Coefficient alpha was highest for the 22 and 12 item scales, and the two scales also showed the highest long‐term stability. The three new scales reflect relatively independent dimensions of Psychosomatic Symptoms, Mental Symptoms, and Interpersonal Problems, but because of reliability problems it remains an open question whether they will prove useful as predictors of health and morbidity.
Keywords:Mental vulnerability  mental health  psychometric characteristics  non‐parametric item response analysis  NEO‐PI‐R  SCL‐90‐R
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