Psychometric Evaluation and Predictive Validity of Ryff's Psychological Well-being Items in a UK Birth Cohort Sample of Women
Overview
Authors
Affiliations
Background: Investigations of the structure of psychological well-being items are useful for advancing knowledge of what dimensions define psychological well-being in practice. Ryff has proposed a multidimensional model of psychological well-being and her questionnaire items are widely used but their latent structure and factorial validity remains contentious.
Methods: We applied latent variable models for factor analysis of ordinal/categorical data to a 42-item version of Ryff's psychological well-being scales administered to women aged 52 in a UK birth cohort study (n = 1,179). Construct (predictive) validity was examined against a measure of mental health recorded one year later.
Results: Inter-factor correlations among four of the first-order psychological well-being constructs were sufficiently high (> 0.80) to warrant a parsimonious representation as a second-order general well-being dimension. Method factors for questions reflecting positive and negative item content, orthogonal to the construct factors and assumed independent of each other, improved model fit by removing nuisance variance. Predictive validity correlations between psychological well-being and a multidimensional measure of psychological distress were dominated by the contribution of environmental mastery, in keeping with earlier findings from cross-sectional studies that have correlated well-being and severity of depression.
Conclusion: Our preferred model included a single second-order factor, loaded by four of the six first-order factors, two method factors, and two more distinct first-order factors. Psychological well-being is negatively associated with dimensions of mental health. Further investigation of precision of measurement across the health continuum is required.
Tibubos A, Reinwarth A, Reiner I, Werner A, Wild P, Munzel T J Patient Rep Outcomes. 2025; 9(1):25.
PMID: 39998720 PMC: 11861829. DOI: 10.1186/s41687-025-00854-9.
What's the Matter? Alcohol Use Risk Among Relatives of People with Mental Illness.
McKeag S, Flett G, Goldberg J Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2025; 21(12.
PMID: 39767476 PMC: 11675383. DOI: 10.3390/ijerph21121637.
Zhong T Front Public Health. 2024; 12:1442632.
PMID: 39440180 PMC: 11493698. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1442632.
Wang X, Xia B, Skitmore M, Volz K, Shu B Front Public Health. 2024; 12:1457022.
PMID: 39430707 PMC: 11486756. DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1457022.
Psychological Well-Being of Nurses with One to Five Years of Clinical Experience.
Yi E, Lee S SAGE Open Nurs. 2024; 10:23779608241255300.
PMID: 38779615 PMC: 11110498. DOI: 10.1177/23779608241255300.