Background:
Mental well-being is an important, yet understudied, area of research, partly due to lack of appropriate
population-based measures. The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS) was developed to meet the
needs for such a measure. This article assesses the psychometric properties of the Norwegian version of the WEMWBS,
and its short-version (SWEMWBS) among a sample of primary health care patients who participated in the evaluation
of Prompt Mental Health Care (PMHC), a novel Norwegian mental health care program aimed to increase access to
treatment for anxiety and depression.
Methods:
Forward and back-translations were conducted, and 1168 patients filled out an electronic survey including
the WEMWBS, and other mental health scales. The original dataset was randomly divided into a training sample (
≈
70%)
and a validation sample (
≈
30%). Parallel analysis and confirmatory factor analysis were carried out to assess construct
validity and precision. The final models were cross-validated in the validation sample by specifying a model with fixed
parameters based on the estimates from the trainings set. Criterion validity and measurement invariance of the (S)
WEMWBS were examined as well.
Results:
Support was found for the single factor hypothesis in both scales, but similar to previous studies, only after a
number of residuals were allowed to correlate (WEMWBS: CFI = 0.99; RMSEA = 0.06, SWEMWBS: CFI = .99; RMSEA = 0.06).
Further analyses showed that the correlated residuals did not alter the meaning of the underlying construct and did not
substantially affect the associations with other variables. Precision was high for both versions of the WEMWBS (>.80), and
scalar measurement invariance was obtained for gender and age group. The final measurement models displayed
adequate fit statistics in the validation sample as well. Cor
relations with other mental health scales were largely in
line with expectations. No statistically significant differences were found in mean latent (S)WEMWBS scores for
age and gender.
Conclusion:
Both WEMWBS scales appear to be valid and precise instruments to measure mental well-being in primary
health care patients. The results encourage the use of mental well-being as an outcome in future epidemiological,
clinical, and evaluation studies, and may as such be valuable for both research and public health practice.