Abstract

The study was designed with two objectives. The first was to assess the factor structure, internal consistency reliability, and preliminary psychometric properties of the Chinese version of the Chinese-translated General Social Capital Scale (GSCS) in a sample of Chinese medical professionals. The second was to investigate the association between general social capital, physical disease, and psychological distress using the same Chinese sample. The English version of the GSCS was translated into Chinese, and its factor structure, estimates of internal consistency reliability, and psychometric properties were examined in a representative sample of medical professionals. In particular, a total of 3367 participants in Shandong Province, China were identified using the multi-stage stratified sampling method. In addition to the GSCS, preliminary data were collected using self-report instruments that included questionnaires on physical diseases, psychological distress, and general sociodemographic information. Results include internal consistency reliability estimates at 0.933 and acceptable values of the Guttman split-half coefficients for the GSCS and its subscales. The Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin value for the Chinese GSCS was 0.933, and the p-value of Bartlett’s test was less than 0.001. Exploratory factor analysis supported nine components of the scale with an acceptable cumulative rate (66.63%). The study further found a negative relationship between physical diseases, psychological distress, and social capital. The Chinese version of the GSCS has a satisfactory factor structure, reliability estimates, and satisfactory evidence of concurrent validity estimates for medical professionals from various demographic backgrounds. The current scale holds promise for wide use in future investigations on Chinese populations.

Highlights

  • The association between social capital and health has gained increased research attention during the previous two decades

  • To evaluate the reliability and validity of the Chinese version of the General Social Capital Scale (GSCS) and analyze the association between physical diseases, mental health, and social capital, a total of 3367 medical professionals answered the questionnaire in Chinese general hospitals

  • The current study mainly aimed to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Chinese version of the GSCS and analyzed the associations between physical diseases, psychological distress, and social capital among medical professionals

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Summary

Introduction

The association between social capital and health has gained increased research attention during the previous two decades. A large body of epidemiological literature has documented the association between individual social context and physical or mental health, with a special focus on the benefits of resources inherent in the structures of social capital for the prevention of physical disease and for the achievement of psychological well-being [1,2]. A large body of evidence using data across populations has found that social capital may be a protective factor in the prevention of mental illness [6,7,8,9].

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