Assessment of Obsessive Thoughts About COVID-19 in 7 Latin American Countries: Structure and Measurement Invariance of the Obsession With COVID-19 Scale.
Tomás Caycho-RodríguezRenzo Rivera-CalcinaLindsey W VilcaCarlos Carbajal-LeónPablo D ValenciaDaniel E Yupanqui-LorenzoWalter L Arias GallegosMario Reyes-BossioNicol Oré-KovacsClaudio Rojas-JaraMiguel GallegosRoberto Polanco-CarrascoMauricio CervigniPablo MartinoMarlon Elías Lobos-RiveraRodrigo Moreta-HerreraDiego Alejandro Palacios SeguraAntonio Samaniego-PinhoAndrés Buschiazzo FigaresDiana Ximena Puerta-CortésAndrés CamargoJulio ToralesJ Arkangel Monge BlancoPedronel GonzálezVanessa Smith-CastroOlimpia Petzold-RodriguezRaymundo CalderónWendy Yamilet Matute RiveraDaniela Ferrufino-BorjaAgueda Muñoz-Del-Carpio-ToiaJorge PalaciosCarmen Burgos-VidelaAna María Eduviges Florez LeónIbeth VergaraDiego VegaMartin Noe-GrijalvaMarion K ShulmeyerHassell Tatiana Urrutia RiosArelly Esther Lira LiraSherman Aclaracion LeePublished in: Omega (2023)
The present study aimed to evaluate the measurement invariance of the Obsession with COVID-19 Scale (OCS) among seven Latin American countries: Bolivia, Brazil, Cuba, El Salvador, Guatemala, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Although the OCS has been used in several countries and languages, there is a need for approaches that better integrate the cross-cultural equivalence of the scale. A total of 3185 people participated in the study. The results indicated the presence of a unidimensional structure and good reliability indices for the OCS in each country. The alignment method indicated that the OCS is an invariant measure of COVID-19 obsession among the populations of seven Latin American countries. The findings based on IRT analysis indicated that all OCS items had adequate discrimination and difficulty parameters. The findings contribute to the understanding of the internal structure of the scale in different countries at the same time, something that has been pending evaluation.