2016
DOI: 10.1177/0706743716675855
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Psychometric Evaluation of the Mental Health Continuum–Short Form in French Canadian Young Adults

Abstract: Objective: To examine the factor structure, internal consistency, reliability, sex invariance, and discriminant validity of the French

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Cited by 43 publications
(52 citation statements)
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References 46 publications
(136 reference statements)
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“…Based on previous research, the following six models were evaluated in all three samples: (a) a single factor CFA model with all 14 items; (b) a two correlated factors CFA model with EWB in one factor and both SWB and PWB in a second factor; (c) a three correlated factors CFA model with EWB, SWB, and PWB, as proposed by Keyes (), (); (d) a bifactor CFA model (Schmid & Leiman, ), where each item loads on a specific factor (i.e., EWB, SWB, or PWB) and simultaneously on a general factor (GF), all four factors being orthogonal to each other (de Bruin & du Plessis, ; Hides et al, ; Jovanovic, ); (e) a three‐factor ESEM model (Asparouhov & Muthén, ; Marsh et al, ), where all 14 items are loading on all three correlated factors (i.e., EWB, SWB, and PWB) simultaneously (Joshanloo, ; Joshanloo & Jovanovic, ; Joshanloo & Lamers, ; Joshanloo, Jose, et al, ); (f) a bifactor ESEM model (Morin et al, ), where all 14 items are simultaneously loading on EWB, SWB, PWB, and GF, all four factors being orthogonal to each other (Lamborn, Cramer, & Riberdy, ; Longo, Jovanovic, Sampaio de Carvalho, & Karas, ; Rogoza et al, ; Schutte & Wissing, ). We did not test a higher‐order model (Dore et al, ; Lupano Perugini et al, ; Petrillo et al, ) because for a three first‐order factorial structure, like MHC‐SF, the second‐order is just identified. Thus, it is not possible to evaluate if the second‐order factor improves the model fit when compared with the first‐order solution (Wang & Wang, ). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Based on previous research, the following six models were evaluated in all three samples: (a) a single factor CFA model with all 14 items; (b) a two correlated factors CFA model with EWB in one factor and both SWB and PWB in a second factor; (c) a three correlated factors CFA model with EWB, SWB, and PWB, as proposed by Keyes (), (); (d) a bifactor CFA model (Schmid & Leiman, ), where each item loads on a specific factor (i.e., EWB, SWB, or PWB) and simultaneously on a general factor (GF), all four factors being orthogonal to each other (de Bruin & du Plessis, ; Hides et al, ; Jovanovic, ); (e) a three‐factor ESEM model (Asparouhov & Muthén, ; Marsh et al, ), where all 14 items are loading on all three correlated factors (i.e., EWB, SWB, and PWB) simultaneously (Joshanloo, ; Joshanloo & Jovanovic, ; Joshanloo & Lamers, ; Joshanloo, Jose, et al, ); (f) a bifactor ESEM model (Morin et al, ), where all 14 items are simultaneously loading on EWB, SWB, PWB, and GF, all four factors being orthogonal to each other (Lamborn, Cramer, & Riberdy, ; Longo, Jovanovic, Sampaio de Carvalho, & Karas, ; Rogoza et al, ; Schutte & Wissing, ). We did not test a higher‐order model (Dore et al, ; Lupano Perugini et al, ; Petrillo et al, ) because for a three first‐order factorial structure, like MHC‐SF, the second‐order is just identified. Thus, it is not possible to evaluate if the second‐order factor improves the model fit when compared with the first‐order solution (Wang & Wang, ). …”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite the well‐documented association between psychopathology, especially affective disorders, and well‐being, as assessed with the MHC‐SF, its psychometric properties have been primarily evaluated in general population samples or national epidemiological surveys. In particular, the MHC‐SF has been translated and validated in various countries and cultural contexts (Zemojtel‐Piotrowska et al, ), including Argentina (Lupano Perugini, de la Iglesia, Castro Solano, & Keyes, ), Australia (Hides et al, ), Brazil (Machado & Bandeira, ), Canada (Dore, O'Loughlin, Sabiston, & Fournier, ; Orpana, Vachon, Dykxhoorn, & Jayaraman, ), Chile (Echeverria et al, ), China (Guo et al, ), France (Ismaïl & Salama‐Younes, ), Iran (Joshanloo, ; Joshanloo, Wissing, Khumalo, & Lamers, ), Italy (Joshanloo, Capone, Petrillo, & Caso, ; Petrillo, Capone, Caso, & Keyes, ), the Netherlands (Joshanloo et al, ; Lamers, Westerhof, Bohlmeijer, ten Klooster, & Keyes, ), New Zealand (Joshanloo, Jose, & Kielpikowski, ), Poland (Karas, Cieciuch, & Keyes, ), Portugal (de Carvalho, Pereira, Pinto, & Marôco, ), Serbia (Joshanloo & Jovanovic, ; Jovanovic, ), South Africa (Joshanloo et al, ; Keyes et al, ), South Korea (Lim, ), United States (Joshanloo, ) and Vietnam (Rogoza, Truong Thi, Rozycka‐Tran, Piotrowski, & Zemojtel‐Piotrowska, ), providing an ample body of evidence in support of Keyes's model of well‐being. Although all of these studies were performed in nonclinical samples, they often included several mental illness measures to investigate the discriminant validity of the MHC‐SF.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The MHC-SF has good reliability and was validated with many languages [37][38] including Canadian French. 39 In this study, moderate and languishing mental health levels were merged because the proportion of the latter was too small.…”
Section: Positive Mental Health Positive Mental Health Was Captured mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some support the threefactor model (emotional, psychological, social wellbeing) both in adolescent [11,12,[15][16][17] and in adult samples [5,18]. Others studies, mainly those which used ESEM, alluded to a bifactor structure among adolescents [19,20] and adults [21,22] and other detected good fit for both three-factor and bifactor models on their adult data [13,23]. In general, the one (unidimensional general well-being) and two factor (emotional well-being and psychological well-being with social well-being) solutions were not supported (except Machado and his colleagues in 2015 [24]).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 97%