Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in Nepal

Objective: To develop and validate the Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale for assessing mental health literacy among community health workers. Method: A total of 24 items were initially generated and refined through cognitive interviews and expert evaluation. The final scale consisted of 20 ite...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shishir Paudel, Anisha Chalise, Prashabdhi Shakya, Tulsi Ram Bhandari
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-06-01
Series:SAGE Open Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20503121251341423
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849335665341235200
author Shishir Paudel
Anisha Chalise
Prashabdhi Shakya
Tulsi Ram Bhandari
author_facet Shishir Paudel
Anisha Chalise
Prashabdhi Shakya
Tulsi Ram Bhandari
author_sort Shishir Paudel
collection DOAJ
description Objective: To develop and validate the Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale for assessing mental health literacy among community health workers. Method: A total of 24 items were initially generated and refined through cognitive interviews and expert evaluation. The final scale consisted of 20 items. Face validity was ensured through cognitive interviews conducted in two phases with community health workers and volunteers. Content validity was assured based on the ratings of six experts. Cross-sectional survey was performed among 233 community health workers. Exploratory factor analysis using Varimax rotation was performed to identify latent variables with factor loadings > 0.4. Confirmatory factor analysis was employed to validate the model, using root mean square error of approximation < 0.05, standardized root mean square residual < 0.08, comparative fit index ⩾ 0.90, and Tucker–Lewis index ⩾ 0.90. Reliability was assessed through Cronbach’s alpha where alpha coefficient > 0.70 indicated internal consistency. Results: Exploratory factor analysis identified four factors explaining 50.75% of variance explained by positive mental health behaviors (21.44%), misconceptions about mental health (14.24%), symptoms of mental distress (8.70%), and mental health stigma (6.37%). The confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated excellent model fit, with indices such as the normed Chi-square (1.31), comparative fit index (0.95), Tucker–Lewis index (0.94), and root mean square error of approximation (0.03). The scale displayed strong convergent and discriminant validity, with an average variance extracted > 0.43 and composite reliability > 0.70 for all factors. Internal consistency was confirmed, with a Cronbach’s alpha value of 0.78 for the overall scale. Conclusion: The Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale has demonstrated robust psychometric properties and comprehensive coverage of mental health literacy components, making it a valuable tool for both research and practical applications among Community health workers in Nepal. While these findings support its utility in this context, further validation is needed to establish its applicability across other low- and middle-income countries to assess its effectiveness in diverse cultural and geographic settings.
format Article
id doaj-art-46d8bcc3dcb14161afff65688293241e
institution Kabale University
issn 2050-3121
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher SAGE Publishing
record_format Article
series SAGE Open Medicine
spelling doaj-art-46d8bcc3dcb14161afff65688293241e2025-08-20T03:45:11ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open Medicine2050-31212025-06-011310.1177/20503121251341423Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in NepalShishir Paudel0Anisha Chalise1Prashabdhi Shakya2Tulsi Ram Bhandari3Kathmandu Institute of Child Health, Hepali Height, NepalCenter for Research on Environment Health and Population Activities, Kusunti, Lalitpur, NepalDepartment of Public Health, CiST College, Pokhara University, Kathmandu, NepalSchool of Health and Allied Sciences, Pokhara University, Kaski, NepalObjective: To develop and validate the Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale for assessing mental health literacy among community health workers. Method: A total of 24 items were initially generated and refined through cognitive interviews and expert evaluation. The final scale consisted of 20 items. Face validity was ensured through cognitive interviews conducted in two phases with community health workers and volunteers. Content validity was assured based on the ratings of six experts. Cross-sectional survey was performed among 233 community health workers. Exploratory factor analysis using Varimax rotation was performed to identify latent variables with factor loadings > 0.4. Confirmatory factor analysis was employed to validate the model, using root mean square error of approximation < 0.05, standardized root mean square residual < 0.08, comparative fit index ⩾ 0.90, and Tucker–Lewis index ⩾ 0.90. Reliability was assessed through Cronbach’s alpha where alpha coefficient > 0.70 indicated internal consistency. Results: Exploratory factor analysis identified four factors explaining 50.75% of variance explained by positive mental health behaviors (21.44%), misconceptions about mental health (14.24%), symptoms of mental distress (8.70%), and mental health stigma (6.37%). The confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated excellent model fit, with indices such as the normed Chi-square (1.31), comparative fit index (0.95), Tucker–Lewis index (0.94), and root mean square error of approximation (0.03). The scale displayed strong convergent and discriminant validity, with an average variance extracted > 0.43 and composite reliability > 0.70 for all factors. Internal consistency was confirmed, with a Cronbach’s alpha value of 0.78 for the overall scale. Conclusion: The Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale has demonstrated robust psychometric properties and comprehensive coverage of mental health literacy components, making it a valuable tool for both research and practical applications among Community health workers in Nepal. While these findings support its utility in this context, further validation is needed to establish its applicability across other low- and middle-income countries to assess its effectiveness in diverse cultural and geographic settings.https://doi.org/10.1177/20503121251341423
spellingShingle Shishir Paudel
Anisha Chalise
Prashabdhi Shakya
Tulsi Ram Bhandari
Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in Nepal
SAGE Open Medicine
title Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in Nepal
title_full Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in Nepal
title_fullStr Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in Nepal
title_short Development and validation of Mental Health Literacy Assessment Scale among community health workers in Nepal
title_sort development and validation of mental health literacy assessment scale among community health workers in nepal
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20503121251341423
work_keys_str_mv AT shishirpaudel developmentandvalidationofmentalhealthliteracyassessmentscaleamongcommunityhealthworkersinnepal
AT anishachalise developmentandvalidationofmentalhealthliteracyassessmentscaleamongcommunityhealthworkersinnepal
AT prashabdhishakya developmentandvalidationofmentalhealthliteracyassessmentscaleamongcommunityhealthworkersinnepal
AT tulsirambhandari developmentandvalidationofmentalhealthliteracyassessmentscaleamongcommunityhealthworkersinnepal