Author:
Caycho-Rodríguez Tomás,Vilca Lindsey W.,Valencia Pablo D.,Carbajal-León Carlos,Reyes-Bossio Mario,White Michel,Rojas-Jara Claudio,Polanco-Carrasco Roberto,Gallegos Miguel,Cervigni Mauricio,Martino Pablo,Palacios Diego Alejandro,Moreta-Herrera Rodrigo,Samaniego-Pinho Antonio,Lobos-Rivera Marlon Elías,Buschiazzo Figares Andrés,Puerta-Cortés Diana Ximena,Corrales-Reyes Ibraín Enrique,Calderón Raymundo,Franco Ferrari Ilka,Flores-Mendoza Carmen
Abstract
Abstract
Background
There is an urgent need to assess changes in well-being on a multinational scale during the COVID-19 pandemic, thus culturally valid scales must be available.
Methods
With this in mind, this study examined the invariance of the WHO well-being index (WHO-5) among a sample of 5183 people from 12 Latin Americans countries (Argentina, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Cuba, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Mexico, Paraguay, Peru, and Uruguay).
Results
The results of the present study indicate that the WHO-5 is strictly invariant across samples from different Latin American countries. Furthermore, the results of the IRT analysis indicate that all items of the WHO-5 were highly discriminative and that the difficulty required to respond to each of the five items is ascending. Additionally, the results indicated the presence of moderate and small size differences in subjective well-being among most countries.
Conclusion
The WHO-5 is useful for assessing subjective well-being in 12 Latin American countries during the COVID-19 pandemic, since the differences between scores can be attributed to differences in well-being and not in other characteristics of the scale.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Psychology,General Medicine
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