A validation study of the Occupational Depression Inventory in Poland and Ukraine

Sci Rep. 2024 Feb 22;14(1):4403. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-54995-w.

Abstract

This study examined the psychometric and structural properties of the Polish and Ukrainian versions of the Occupational Depression Inventory (ODI). We relied on two samples of Polish employees (NSample1 = 526, 47% female; NSample2 = 164, 64% female) and one sample of Ukrainian employees (NSample3 = 372, 73% female). In all samples, the ODI exhibited essential unidimensionality and high total-score reliability (e.g., McDonald's omegas > 0.90). The homogeneity of the scale was strong (e.g., 0.59 ≤ scale-level Hs ≤ 0.68). The ODI's total scores thus accurately ranked individuals on a latent occupational depression continuum. We found evidence of complete measurement invariance across our samples, a prerequisite for between-group comparisons involving observed scores. Looking into the criterion validity of the ODI, we found occupational depression to correlate, in the expected direction, with resilience and job-person fit in six areas of working life-workload, control, rewards, community, fairness, and values. The prevalence of occupational depression was estimated at 5% in Sample 1, 18% in Sample 2, and 3% in Sample 3. Our findings support the use of the ODI's Polish and Ukrainian versions. This study adds to a growing corpus of research suggesting that the ODI is a robust instrument.

Keywords: Burnout; Factor analysis; Job-related distress; Mokken scale analysis; Occupational health; Psychometrics.

MeSH terms

  • Depression* / diagnosis
  • Depression* / epidemiology
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Poland / epidemiology
  • Psychometrics
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Surveys and Questionnaires
  • Ukraine / epidemiology