The perceived vulnerability to disease scale : Cross-cultural measurement invariance and associations with fear of COVID-19 across 16 countries

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Authors

KARAKULAK Arzu STOGIANNI Maria ALONSO-ARBIOL Itziar SHUKLA Shanu BENDER Michael YEUNG Victoria Wai Lan JOVANOVIĆ Veljko MUSSO Pasquale SCARDIGNO Rosa SCOTT Riley A STUART Jaimee FRIEHS Maria-Therese TOH Zena ALBAYRAK-AYDEMIR Nihan ARVANITIS Alexios BUZEA Carmen MASTROTHEODOROS Stefanos TSANG Jo-Ann MADEIRA Filipa MICONI Diana PASCUAL Nicole Russell ROWATT Wade C AL-KIRE Rosemary L AMAR Moty ARAL Tugce ITZCHAKOV Guy MISHRA Sushanta Kumar PORAT Roni SERVIDIO Rocco STEFENEL Delia TAIR Ergyul GKOMEZ Alexandros

Year of publication 2023
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Social and Personality Psychology Compass
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Social Studies

Citation
Web article - open access
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/spc3.12878
Keywords culture; disease threat; fear of COVID-19; measurement invariance; perceived vulnerability to disease
Attached files
Description Using cross-sectional data from N = 4274 young adults across 16 countries during the COVID-19 pandemic, we examined the cross-cultural measurement invariance of the perceived vulnerability to disease (PVD) scale and tested the hypothesis that the association between PVD and fear of COVID-19 is stronger under high disease threat [that is, absence of COVID-19 vaccination, living in a country with lower Human Development Index (HDI) or higher COVID-19 mortality]. Results supported a bi-factor Exploratory Structural Equation Modeling model where items loaded on a global PVD factor, and on the sub-factors of Perceived Infectability and Germ Aversion. However, cross-national invariance could only be obtained on the configural level with a reduced version of the PVD scale (PVD-r), suggesting that the concept of PVD may vary across nations. Moreover, higher PVD-r was consistently associated with greater fear of COVID-19 across all levels of disease threat, but this association was especially pronounced among individuals with a COVID-19 vaccine, and in contexts where COVID-19 mortality was high. The present research brought clarity into the dimensionality of the PVD measure, discussed its suitability and limitations for cross-cultural research, and highlighted the pandemic-related conditions under which higher PVD is most likely to go along with psychologically maladaptive outcomes, such as fear of COVID-19.
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