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Preliminary validation of measures of experienced, perceived, and internalized stigma among adults who are d/Deaf or hard of hearing in the United States and Ghana
Stelmach, R. D., Stockton, M. A., Kraemer, J. D., Nyarko, M., Adams, E. T., Boafo, N., Owusu, N. A. V., Saalim, K., Alberg, J., Tang, B., Musa, L. G., Wu, C.-H., Gyamera, E., & Nyblade, L. (2024). Preliminary validation of measures of experienced, perceived, and internalized stigma among adults who are d/Deaf or hard of hearing in the United States and Ghana. Ear and Hearing, 45(Suppl 1), 17S-25S. https://doi.org/10.1097/AUD.0000000000001476
Objectives: In this article, we examine the psychometric performance of 3 scales measuring experienced, perceived, and internalized d/Deaf or hard of hearing (d/DHH) stigma among adult (18 and older) populations of individuals who are d/DHH, including those who have been d/DHH since before they developed language (lifelong) and those who became d/DHH after they developed language (acquired) in the United States and Ghana.Design: The preliminary validation study took place in the Greater Accra and Eastern regions of Ghana and across the United States. In the United States, all data were collected online via self-administered surveys in English. In Ghana, trained interviewers who are d/DHH and fluent in Ghanaian Sign Language conducted interviews with participants who are lifelong d/DHH using a video survey. Ghanaian participants with acquired d/DHH status were surveyed by trained hearing interviewers. We calculated polychoric correlation matrices between the measures to remove redundant and unrelated items and used exploratory factor analysis to create the final scales. We also tested the association between the factor scores and a simple summing method for calculating the scale.Results: The study sample included people who have been d/DHH since before they developed language (Ghana: n = 171, United States n = 100) and people who became d/DHH after they developed language (Ghana: n = 174, United States: n = 219). The final experienced, perceived, and internalized scales included six, seven, and five items, respectively. All three scales performed well as unidimensional measures across all four samples. Across the four samples, the experienced, perceived, and internalized stigma scales yielded ordinal alpha s ranging from 0.725 to 0.947, 0.856 to 0.935, and 0.856 to 0.935, respectively. It would be acceptable to operationalize all stigma scales as sum-of-item scores.Conclusions: The scales performed well and appear to provide a valid means of measuring different types of stigma among diverse groups of people who are d/DHH. Future work should refine and validate these scales in additional contexts.