Psychometric Properties of the Anxiety Measure: Stress and Anxiety to Viral Epidemics-6 (SAVE-6) for Spanish Medical Students
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Sarhani Robles, Aziz; Guillot Valdés, María; Lendínez-Rodríguez, Cristina; Robles-Bello, María Auxiliadora; Sánchez-Teruel, David; Valencia-Naranjo, Nieves J.Editorial
MDPI
Materia
SAVE-6 medical students psychometric properties
Fecha
2024-11-03Referencia bibliográfica
Sarhani Robles, A. et. al. Medicina 2024, 60, 1803. [https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina60111803]
Resumen
Backgroud and Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate the psychometric properties
of SAVE-6 in the medical student population and assess its gender invariance. Subjects and Methods:
The sample consisted of 320 medical students aged 18–23 years (153 men and 167 women) who
completed an anonymous online questionnaire. Data collection took place in June 2024. To assess
the scale structure, a descriptive analysis of the items was carried out, followed by a confirmatory
factor analysis (CFA). To analyze whether there were differences in the invariance of the measure
by gender, a multigroup CFA was performed. Results: SAVE-6 showed high internal consistency,
α = 0.89 and ω = 0.92, a minimum score of 12, a maximum score of 22, an unifactorial structure, and
adequate convergent validity. Specifically, the following were found: the positive and significant
relationship with HADS was 0.98 for the full scale, 0.76 for depression, and 0.91 for anxiety, and there
was a negative and significant convergent validity with resilience (−0.82) and resilience to suicide
attempts (−0.88). Regarding the gender invariance, relevant data is that the factor loadings between
each item and the SAVE-6 factor were not the same, so women present a higher level of anxiety than
men (Δχ2 (6) = 42.53). Discussion: The results showed good internal reliability of SAVE-6 and good
suitability. Data also revealed that they were not equal in relation to gender. Specifically, the scalar
invariance revealed significant differences by items between men and women in anxiety. Conclusions:
This scale can be applied to medical students as a reliable and valid instrument to assess the anxiety
response to disease contagion in future health professionals.





