Abstract
BackgroundThe 12-item Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale (MOS Sleep Scale) has been used to capture patient-reported sleep problems in hundreds of studies. A revised version of the MOS Sleep Scale (MOS Sleep-R) was developed that uses simplified response sets, provides interpretable norm-based scoring, and has two recall versions (one-week or four-week). The objective of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties (reliability and construct validity) of the MOS Sleep-R using data from a representative sample of U.S. adults.MethodsStandardization of raw scores into norm-based T-scores (mean = 50, standard deviation = 10) was based on data from a 2009 U.S. internet-based general population survey. The internal consistency reliability of multi-item subscales and global sleep problems indices for both one-week and four-week recall forms of the MOS Sleep-R were examined using Cronbach’s alphas and inter-item correlations. Construct validity was tested by comparing item-scale correlations between items within subscales with item-scale correlations across subscales. Scale-level convergent validity was tested using correlations with measures including generic health-related quality of life (i.e., SF-36v2) and other relevant outcomes (e.g., job performance, number of days in bed due to illness or injury, happiness/satisfaction with life, frequency of stress/pressure in daily life, the impact of stress/pressure on health, and overall health).ResultsThe one-week and four-week recall forms of the MOS Sleep-R were completed by 2045 and 2033 respondents, respectively. The psychometric properties of the one-week and four-week forms were similar. All multi-item subscales and global index scores showed adequate internal consistency reliability (all Cronbach’s alpha > 0.75). Patterns of inter-item and item-scale correlations support the scaling assumptions of the MOS Sleep-R. Patterns of correlations between MOS Sleep-R scores with criterion measures of health-related quality of life and other outcomes indicated adequate construct validity.ConclusionsThe MOS Sleep-R introduces a number of revisions to the original survey, including simplified response sets, the introduction of a one-week recall form, and norm-based scoring that enhances interpretability of scores. Both the one-week and four-week recall period forms of the MOS Sleep-R demonstrated good internal consistency reliability and construct validity in a U.S. general population sample.
Highlights
Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale (Sleep) is a crucial biological function, strongly tied to physical and mental health outcomes
Seven to 9 h of sleep are recommended for adults [21], but approximately 30% of Americans report consistently getting less than 6 h of sleep per night [22]
The aim of the present study is to evaluate the psychometric properties of the standard and acute versions of the MOS Medical Outcomes Study Sleep Scale Revised (Sleep-R) within a nationally representative sample of adults
Summary
Sleep is a crucial biological function, strongly tied to physical and mental health outcomes. Many people do not get enough sleep [20]. Seven to 9 h of sleep are recommended for adults [21], but approximately 30% of Americans report consistently getting less than 6 h of sleep per night [22]. Self-reported data indicate that 25–40% of people experience poor sleep quality or symptoms of insomnia [23,24,25]. Given the high rates of insufficient and low quality sleep, it is important to accurately measure and interpret aspects of sleep in both clinical practice and in research. The objective of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties (reliability and construct validity) of the MOS Sleep-R using data from a representative sample of U.S adults
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