Abstract

PurposeThis study assesses the construct validity and sensitivity to change of the Short Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (SWEMWBS) as an outcome measure in the treatment of common mental disorders (CMD) in primary care settings.Methods127 participants attending up to 5 sessions of therapy for CMD in primary care self-rated the SWEMWBS, the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and General Anxiety Disorder (GAD-7) scales. SWEMWBS’s construct validity and sensitivity to change was evaluated against the PHQ-9 and GAD-7 across multiple time points in two ways: correlation coefficients were calculated between the measures at each time point; and sensitivity to change over time was assessed using repeated measures ANOVA.ResultsScore distributions on SWEMWBS, but not PHQ-9 and GAD-7, met criteria for normality. At baseline, 92.9% (118/127) of participants scored above clinical threshold on either PHQ-9 or GAD-7. Correlations between SWEMWBS and PHQ-9 scores were calculated at each respective time point and ranged from 0.601 to 0.793. Correlations between SWEMWBS and GAD-7 scores were calculated similarly and ranged from 0.630 to 0.743. Significant improvements were seen on all three scales over time. Changes in PHQ-9 and GAD-7 were curvilinear with greatest improvement between sessions 1 and 2. Change in SWEMWBS was linear over the five sessions.ConclusionsThis exploratory study suggests that SWEMWBS is acceptable as a CMD outcome measure in primary care settings, both in terms of construct validity and sensitivity to change. Given patient preference for positively over negatively framed measures and statistical advantages of measures which are normally distributed, SWEMWBS could be used as an alternative to PHQ-9 and GAD-7 in monitoring and evaluating CMD treatment.

Highlights

  • The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-Being Scale (WEMWBS) was developed in 2007 [1] to support the emerging discipline of public mental health [2] by enabling monitoring of positive mental health and evaluation of interventions, programmes and approaches toShah et al Health and Quality of Life Outcomes (2021) 19:260The Short Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (SWEMWBS) has the added benefit of being shorter and less onerous to complete.The concept of mental wellbeing was developed in the context of positive psychology [4]

  • The aim of this study was to investigate the construct validity of SWEMWBS as an outcome measure in patients with common mental disorders (CMD) undergoing psychological therapy in comparison to two widely used primary care based clinical outcome measures, the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9) [30] and the General Anxiety Disorder 7 scale (GAD-7) [31]

  • Most participants appeared to have a mixed picture of anxiety and depression symptoms, 82.6% (N = 105) exceeded clinical threshold for both scales

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Summary

Introduction

The concept of mental wellbeing was developed in the context of positive psychology [4]. It is recognised as a core indicator of overall health in some jurisdictions [5] and some countries use (S)WEMWBS as an indicator in this context [6,7,8,9,10]. The best approach to measurement of mental wellbeing has been widely debated, but consensus is growing to support the conceptual framework within which WEMWBS was developed, in which mental wellbeing covers aspects of both feeling good (Hedonia) and functioning well (Eudaimonia) [16, 17]. Whilst there is no consensus on single/dual continuum hypotheses, studies to date show a high degree of (inverse) correlation between WEMWBS and widely respected measures of mental illness [1, 19]

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