Abstract

BackgroundThere is no validated measure of positive mental well-being that is suitable for Deaf people who use a signed language such as British Sign Language (BSL). This impedes inclusion of this population in a range of research designed to evaluate effectiveness of interventions. The study aims were: (i) to translate the original English version of SWEMWBS into BSL and to test the SWEMWBS BSL with the Deaf population in the UK who use BSL; (ii) to examine its psychometric properties; and (iii) to establish the validity and reliability of the SWEMWBS BSL.MethodsThe SWEMWBS was translated into BSL following a six stage translation procedure and in consultation with the originators. The draft version was piloted with Deaf BSL users (n = 96) who also completed the CORE-OM BSL well-being subscale and the EQ-5D VAS BSL. Reliability was explored using Cronbach’s alpha for internal consistency and ICC for test-retest reliability. Validity was explored by using Kendall’s tau correction for convergent validity and an exploratory factor analysis for construct validity.ResultsThe internal consistency for the reliability of the SWEMWBS BSL was found to be good and the test-retest one week apart showed an acceptable reliability. There was good convergent validity of the SWEMWBS BSL with the well-being subscale of the CORE-OM BSL and the EQ-5D VAS BSL.ConclusionsThe SWEMWBS BSL can be used with a Deaf population of BSL users. This is the first validated version of a BSL instrument that focuses solely on positively phrased questions for measuring mental well-being.

Highlights

  • There is no validated measure of positive mental well-being that is suitable for Deaf people who use a signed language such as British Sign Language (BSL)

  • Studies have indicated that the WEMWBS has good validity and reliability for measuring mental well-being in the UK population who use spoken/written English [8]

  • Cognitive testing interview The third draft of the pre-validation SWEMWBS BSL was tested with 27 Deaf participants (14 females and 13 males; aged between 26 to 76 years old)

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Summary

Introduction

There is no validated measure of positive mental well-being that is suitable for Deaf people who use a signed language such as British Sign Language (BSL). This impedes inclusion of this population in a range of research designed to evaluate effectiveness of interventions. The eudaimonic features are based on an approach to well-being that emphasises action, agency and self-actualisation (e.g. sense of control, personal growth, feelings of purpose and belonging). The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale [4] was designed as a measure encompassing both approaches and focuses entirely on positive mental well-being. The short version of the Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale [8] (SWEMWBS) is a validated version

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