Development and validation of the State Moral Elevation Scale: Assessing state-level elevation across nonclinical and clinical samples
By Adam P. McGuire, Candice L. Hayden, Rawda Tomoum, & A. Solomon Kurz
December 1, 2020
Abstract
Research on moral elevation has steadily increased and identified several psychosocial benefits that bear relevance to both the general population and people with psychological distress. However, elevation measurement is inconsistent, and few state-level measures have been created and critically evaluated to date. To address this gap, the State Moral Elevation Scale (SMES) was developed and tested using an online sample (N = 930) including subsamples of general participants (nonclinical) and those who screened positive for mental health symptoms (clinical). Factor analysis indicated a single factor structure with nine items that demonstrated excellent reliability. Multigroup confirmatory factor analysis indicated good fit statistics and strict measurement invariance across clinical and nonclinical subsamples. Lastly, correlational analyses with related constructs provided evidence of construct validity for both subsamples. Thus, the SMES is a psychometrically valid and reliable assessment tool for state-level elevation which can be used in both general and clinical populations.
@article{mcguireDevelopment2022,
title = {Development and validation of the State Moral Elevation Scale: Assessing state-level elevation across nonclinical and clinical samples},
author = {Adam P. McGuire and Candice Hayden and Rawda Tomoum and A. Solomon Kurz},
journal = {Journal of Happiness Studies},
year = 2022,
volume = 23,
page = 2923–2946,
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s10902-022-00533-2}
}
- Posted on:
- December 1, 2020
- Length:
- 1 minute read, 203 words