Medical outcomes study social support survey (MOS-SSS) in patients with chronic disease: A psychometric assessment

Front Psychiatry. 2023 Jan 11:13:1028342. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2022.1028342. eCollection 2022.

Abstract

Purpose: Currently, information on the psychometric properties of the Medical outcomes study-social support survey (MOS-SSS) for patients with chronic disease in primary health care, suggests problems in the dimensionality, specifically predominant unidimensionality in a multidimensional measure. The aim of this study was to determine the internal structure (dimensionality, measurement invariance and reliability) and association with other variables.

Methods: A total of 470 patients with chronic disease from a Family Medicine Unit at the Instituto Mexicano del Seguro Social, IMSS, with a mean age of 51.51 years were included. Participants responded to the Questionnaire of Sociodemographic Variables (Q-SV), SF-36 Health-Related Quality of Life Scale-version 1.1, and MOS-SSS.

Results: Non-parametric (Mokken scaling analysis) and parametric (confirmatory factor analysis) analyses indicated unidimensionality, and three-factor model was not representative. A new 8-item version (MOS-S) was developed, where measurement invariance, equivalence with the long version, reliability, and relationship with the SF-36 were satisfactory.

Conclusion: The MOS-SSS scale is unidimensional, and the shortened version yields valid and reliable scores for measuring social support in patients with chronic disease at the primary health care.

Keywords: MOS-SSS; Mexico; chronic disease; primary health care; psychometric assessment; psychometrics.

Grants and funding

This work presents some results of the research project HIM/2015/017/SSA.1207 “Effects of mindfulness training on psychological distress and quality of life of the family caregiver,” Main researcher: FT-T, Ph.D. The present research was funded with federal funds for health research and was approved by the Commissions of Research, Ethics and Biosafety [Comisiones de Investigación, Ética y Bioseguridad], Hospital Infantil de México Federico Gómez, National Institute of Health. The funding agency had no control over the design of the study; the collection, analysis and interpretation of the data; or the writing of the manuscript.