Faculty Publications
Factors And Measurement Of Mental Illness Stigma: A Psychometric Examination Of The Attribution Questionnaire
Document Type
Article
Keywords
Attribution questionnaire, Psychometrics, Stigma
Journal/Book/Conference Title
Psychiatric Rehabilitation Journal
Volume
32
Issue
2
First Page
89
Last Page
94
Abstract
Objective: A number of scales are employed to measure mental illness stigma, but many fail to have documented or adequate psychometric properties. The purpose of this study was to further evaluate the psychometric properties of one such measure, the Attribution Questionnaire (AQ). Methods: Based on responses from 774 college students, exploratory factor analyses were conducted followed by an examination of the reliability and validity of the newly formed factor scales. Results: A six-factor structure emerged and four of these factor scales (Fear/Dangerousness, Help/Interact, Forcing Treatment, and Negative Emotions) had acceptable internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and convergent validity with other stigma measures. Conclusions: Twenty items from the AQ provide reliable and valid measurement of four important aspects of stigmatizing attitudes/beliefs towards the mentally ill. Accurate measurement of these attitudes/beliefs will be critical to more fully understanding the stigma process and developing effective strategies to address stigma. Copyright 2008 Trustees of Boston University.
Department
Department of Psychology
Original Publication Date
9-1-2008
DOI of published version
10.2975/32.2.2008.89.94
Recommended Citation
Brown, Seth A., "Factors And Measurement Of Mental Illness Stigma: A Psychometric Examination Of The Attribution Questionnaire" (2008). Faculty Publications. 2403.
https://scholarworks.uni.edu/facpub/2403