Abstract

BackgroundPsychological distress is a widespread indicator of mental health and mental illness in research and clinical settings. A recurrent finding from epidemiological studies and population surveys is that women report a higher mean level and a higher prevalence of psychological distress than men. These differences may reflect, to some extent, cultural norms associated with the expression of distress in women and men. Assuming that these norms differ across age groups and that they evolve over time, one would expect gender differences in psychological distress to vary over the life-course and over time. The objective of this study was to investigate the construct validity of a psychological distress scale, the K6, across gender in different age groups and over a twelve-year period.MethodsThis study is based on data from the Canadian National Population Health Survey (C-NPHS). Psychological distress was assessed with the K6, a scale developed by Kessler and his colleagues. Data were examined through multi-group confirmatory factor analyses. Increasing levels of measurement and structural invariance across gender were assessed cross-sectionally with data from cycle 1 (n = 13019) of the C-NPHS and longitudinally with cycles 1 (1994-1995), 4 (2000-2001) and 7 (2006-2007).ResultsHigher levels of measurement and structural invariance across gender were reached only after the constraint of equivalence was relaxed for various parameters of a few items of the K6. Some items had a different pattern of gender non invariance across age groups and over the course of the study. Gender differences in the expression of psychological distress may vary over the lifespan and over a 12-year period without markedly affecting the construct validity of the K6.ConclusionsThis study confirms the cross-gender construct validity of psychological distress as assessed with the K6 despite differences in the expression of some symptoms in women and in men over the life-course and over time. Findings suggest that the higher mean level of psychological distress observed in women reflects a true difference in distress and is unlikely to be gender-biased. Gender differences in psychological distress are an important public health and clinical issue and further researches are needed to decipher the factors underlying these differences.

Highlights

  • Psychological distress is a widespread indicator of mental health and mental illness in research and clinical settings and in public health

  • Access to the survey data files was granted by the Social Science and Humanities Council of Canada (SSHC) and Statistics Canada based on the scientific value of the research protocol and on the curriculum vitae of the researchers involved in this study

  • Preliminary analyses The uni-dimensional structure of the K6 was confirmed in each subgroup based on the three goodness of fit indexes (CFL, Tucker-Lewis index (TLI), root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA)) only after the correlation between the residuals of item B and item C was taken into account and specified in the models

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Summary

Introduction

Psychological distress is a widespread indicator of mental health and mental illness in research and clinical settings. A recurrent finding from epidemiological studies and population surveys is that women report a higher mean level and a higher prevalence of psychological distress than men. These differences may reflect, to some extent, cultural norms associated with the expression of distress in women and men. Psychological distress is a widespread indicator of mental health and mental illness in research and clinical settings and in public health. It combines mostly depression and anxiety symptoms that are indicative of a more or less intense feeling of emotional ill-being. The content and wording of some items may be more in line with the way women experience their feeling of distress

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