Psychometric Evaluation of a Cross-Culturally Adapted Felt Stigma Questionnaire Among People Living with HIV in Kenya.

Authors

Kingori, Caroline
Reece, Michael
Obeng, Samuel
Murray, Maresa
Shacham, Enbal
Dodge, Brian
Akach, Emannuel
Ngatia, Peter
Ojakaa, David

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Article, Journal

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Volume Title

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ResearchGate

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Article, Journal

Abstract

Psychometric properties of an 18-item HIV felt stigma questionnaire were evaluated utilizing data collected froma diverse ethnic and socioeconomic group of 370 people living with HIV/AIDS and receiving HIV/AIDS-relatedhealth services at an HIV clinic in Kenya. Factor analyses revealed a four factor solution (public attitudes,ostracize, discrimination, personal life disrupted) based on the Scree plot with explained variance of 44% thathad Eigen values greater than 1.00. The retained felt stigma items revealed a Cronbach’s alpha coefficient of0.828, while the four factors had coefficient alphas ranging from 0.675 to 0.799. The adapted retained ques-tionnaire was deemed a practical guide for measuring felt stigma in a Kenyan cultural context to necessitateprovision of the most effective HIV-related mental health services to individuals living with HIV in Kenya

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Keywords

Psychometric, Stigma, HIV/AIDS, Mental health, Kenya, PLWHA

Citation

Kingori, Caroline & Reece, Michael & Obeng, Samuel & Murray, Maresa & Shacham, Enbal & Dodge, Brian & Akach, Emmanuel Odhiambo & Ngatia, Peter & Ojakaa, David. (2013). Psychometric Evaluation of a Cross-Culturally Adapted Felt Stigma Questionnaire Among People Living with HIV in Kenya. AIDS patient care and STDs. 27. 481-8. 10.1089/apc.2012.0403.

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