The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects

WEMWBS was developed in 2007 to meet the need for a measure of mental well-being for use in surveys and evaluations of mental health promotion initiatives. It comprises 14 positively worded items relating only to positive attributes of mental health. In addition to offering rigour for research and e...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: S. Stewart Brown, S. Platt, A. Clarke, A. Tennant, N. Leung, H. Maheswaran, J. Parkinson, S. Weich, GREMIGNI, PAOLA
Other Authors: NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, BETHESDA, MD, S. Stewart-Brown, P. Gremigni
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Education Development Center, Inc. 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11585/119265
id ftunibolognairis:oai:cris.unibo.it:11585/119265
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunibolognairis:oai:cris.unibo.it:11585/119265 2024-09-15T18:14:35+00:00 The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects S. Stewart Brown S. Platt A. Clarke A. Tennant N. Leung H. Maheswaran J. Parkinson S. Weich GREMIGNI, PAOLA NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, BETHESDA, MD S. Stewart-Brown S. Platt A. Clarke A. Tennant P. Gremigni N. Leung H. Maheswaran J. Parkinson S. Weich 2010 ELETTRONICO http://hdl.handle.net/11585/119265 eng eng Education Development Center, Inc. country:USA place:NEWTON, MA info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000294820900087 ispartofbook:ADDRESSING IMBALANCES: PROMOTING EQUITY in MENTAL HEALTH. PROCEEDINGS REPORT SIXTH WORLD CONFERENCE on the PROMOTION of MENTAL HEALTHand PREVENTION of MENTAL and BEHAVIORAL DISORDERS firstpage:5 lastpage:6 numberofpages:1 alleditors:NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, BETHESDA, MD http://hdl.handle.net/11585/119265 MENTAL WELL-BEING CONFIRMATORY FACTOR ANALYSIS RASCH ANALYSIS VALIDATION CROSS-CULTURAL info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2010 ftunibolognairis 2024-07-08T14:06:46Z WEMWBS was developed in 2007 to meet the need for a measure of mental well-being for use in surveys and evaluations of mental health promotion initiatives. It comprises 14 positively worded items relating only to positive attributes of mental health. In addition to offering rigour for research and evaluation, WEMWBS’ positive focus offers a developmental perspective, helping to orientate policy makers, programme participants and survey respondents towards mental wellbeing and enabling identification of protective and promoting factors. Initial evaluation on student and adult (16 yrs plus) population groups in the UK showed good content validity; confirmatory factor analysis supported the single factor hypothesis; Cronbach’s alpha suggested the possibility of some item redundancy; the distribution was near normal; there were no ceiling effects; test retest reliability was high and the scale discriminated population groups in a way which was consistent with results of other surveys. Subsequent evaluation demonstrated that a reduced 7 item scale (SWEMWBS) met the stringent measurement properties of a RASCH analysis. Since that time WEMWBS has been validated in young people (13-15 yrs) and in adult Pakistani and Chinese populations living in the UK. It has also been validated in Icelandic and Italian populations and is currently undergoing validation in further European countries (Spain, Germany, France, Portugal, Netherlands Belgium) and into Setswana (a South African native language) and Malay. Several of these validations have adopted a mixed methods approaches, including a qualitative as well as quantitative component. Quantitative evaluations so far suggest that the scale is robust in different population groups and cultures. Qualitative evaluation broadly supports these findings but also offers interesting insights into how mental wellbeing is viewed in across different groups. WEMWBS has been used in large scale national surveys as well as cohort and panel studies in the UK and in Iceland. Because of its ... Conference Object Iceland IRIS Università degli Studi di Bologna (CRIS - Current Research Information System)
institution Open Polar
collection IRIS Università degli Studi di Bologna (CRIS - Current Research Information System)
op_collection_id ftunibolognairis
language English
topic MENTAL WELL-BEING
CONFIRMATORY FACTOR ANALYSIS
RASCH ANALYSIS
VALIDATION
CROSS-CULTURAL
spellingShingle MENTAL WELL-BEING
CONFIRMATORY FACTOR ANALYSIS
RASCH ANALYSIS
VALIDATION
CROSS-CULTURAL
S. Stewart Brown
S. Platt
A. Clarke
A. Tennant
N. Leung
H. Maheswaran
J. Parkinson
S. Weich
GREMIGNI, PAOLA
The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects
topic_facet MENTAL WELL-BEING
CONFIRMATORY FACTOR ANALYSIS
RASCH ANALYSIS
VALIDATION
CROSS-CULTURAL
description WEMWBS was developed in 2007 to meet the need for a measure of mental well-being for use in surveys and evaluations of mental health promotion initiatives. It comprises 14 positively worded items relating only to positive attributes of mental health. In addition to offering rigour for research and evaluation, WEMWBS’ positive focus offers a developmental perspective, helping to orientate policy makers, programme participants and survey respondents towards mental wellbeing and enabling identification of protective and promoting factors. Initial evaluation on student and adult (16 yrs plus) population groups in the UK showed good content validity; confirmatory factor analysis supported the single factor hypothesis; Cronbach’s alpha suggested the possibility of some item redundancy; the distribution was near normal; there were no ceiling effects; test retest reliability was high and the scale discriminated population groups in a way which was consistent with results of other surveys. Subsequent evaluation demonstrated that a reduced 7 item scale (SWEMWBS) met the stringent measurement properties of a RASCH analysis. Since that time WEMWBS has been validated in young people (13-15 yrs) and in adult Pakistani and Chinese populations living in the UK. It has also been validated in Icelandic and Italian populations and is currently undergoing validation in further European countries (Spain, Germany, France, Portugal, Netherlands Belgium) and into Setswana (a South African native language) and Malay. Several of these validations have adopted a mixed methods approaches, including a qualitative as well as quantitative component. Quantitative evaluations so far suggest that the scale is robust in different population groups and cultures. Qualitative evaluation broadly supports these findings but also offers interesting insights into how mental wellbeing is viewed in across different groups. WEMWBS has been used in large scale national surveys as well as cohort and panel studies in the UK and in Iceland. Because of its ...
author2 NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, BETHESDA, MD
S. Stewart-Brown
S. Platt
A. Clarke
A. Tennant
P. Gremigni
N. Leung
H. Maheswaran
J. Parkinson
S. Weich
format Conference Object
author S. Stewart Brown
S. Platt
A. Clarke
A. Tennant
N. Leung
H. Maheswaran
J. Parkinson
S. Weich
GREMIGNI, PAOLA
author_facet S. Stewart Brown
S. Platt
A. Clarke
A. Tennant
N. Leung
H. Maheswaran
J. Parkinson
S. Weich
GREMIGNI, PAOLA
author_sort S. Stewart Brown
title The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects
title_short The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects
title_full The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects
title_fullStr The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects
title_full_unstemmed The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Well-being Scale (WEMWBS): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects
title_sort warwick-edinburgh mental well-being scale (wemwbs): a valid and reliable tool for measuring mental well-being in diverse populations and projects
publisher Education Development Center, Inc.
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/11585/119265
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/wos/WOS:000294820900087
ispartofbook:ADDRESSING IMBALANCES: PROMOTING EQUITY in MENTAL HEALTH. PROCEEDINGS REPORT
SIXTH WORLD CONFERENCE on the PROMOTION of MENTAL HEALTHand PREVENTION of MENTAL and BEHAVIORAL DISORDERS
firstpage:5
lastpage:6
numberofpages:1
alleditors:NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH, NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, BETHESDA, MD
http://hdl.handle.net/11585/119265
_version_ 1810452351667929088