The short version of the Sexual Distress Scale (SDS-3): Measurement invariance across countries, gender identities, and sexual orientations
Author
Lin, Chung-Ying
Tsai, Meng-Che
Koós, Mónika
Nagy, Léna
Kraus, Shane W.
Demetrovics, Zsolt
Potenza, Marc N.
Ballester-Arnal, Rafael
Batthyány, Dominik
Bergeron, Sophie
Billieux, Joël
Briken, Peer
Cárdenas-López, Georgina
Carvalho, Joana
Castro-Calvo, Jesús
Chen, Lijun
Ciocca, Giacomo
Corazza, Ornella
Csako, Rita I.
Fernandez, David P.
Fernandez, Elaine F.
Fujiwara, Hironobu
Fuss, Johannes
Gabrhelík, Roman
Gewirtz-Meydan, Ateret
Gjoneska, Biljana
Gola, Mateusz
Grubbs, Joshua B.
Hashim, Hashim T.
Islam, Md. Saiful
Ismail, Mustafa
Jiménez-Martínez, Martha
Jurin, Tanja
Kalina, Ondrej
Klein, Verena
Költő, András
Lee, Sang-Kyu
Lewczuk, Karol
Lochner, Christine
López-Alvarado, Silvia
Lukavská, Kateřina
Mayta-Tristán, Percy
Milea, Ion
Miller, Dan J.
Orosová, Oľga
Orosz, Gábor
Ponce, Fernando P.
Quintana, Gonzalo R.
Garzola, Gabriel C. Quintero
Ramos-Diaz, Jano
Rigaud, Kévin
Rousseau, Ann
Scanavino, Marco De Tubino
Schulmeyer, Marion K.
Sharan, Pratap
Shibata, Mami
Shoib, Sheikh
Sigre-Leirós, Vera
Sniewski, Luke
Spasovski, Ognen
Steibliene, Vesta
Stein, Dan J.
Strizek, Julian
Štulhofer, Aleksandar
Ünsal, Berk C.
Vaillancourt-Morel, Marie-Pier
Van Hout, Marie Claire
Bőthe, Beáta
Attention
2299/27828
Abstract
Background: The three-item Sexual Distress Scale (SDS-3) has been frequently used to assess distress related to sexuality in public health surveys and research on sexual wellbeing. However, its psychometric properties and measurement invariance across cultural, gender and sexual subgroups have not yet been examined. This multinational study aimed to validate the SDS-3 and test its psychometric properties, including measurement invariance across language, country, gender identity, and sexual orientation groups. Methods: We used global survey data from 82,243 individuals (Mean age=32.39 years; 40.3 % men, 57.0 % women, 2.8 % non-binary, and 0.6 % other genders) participating in the International Sexual Survey (ISS; https://internationalsexsurvey.org/) across 42 countries and 26 languages. Participants completed the SDS-3, as well as questions regarding sociodemographic characteristics, including gender identity and sexual orientation. Results: Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) supported a unidimensional factor structure for the SDS-3, and multi-group CFA (MGCFA) suggested that this factor structure was invariant across countries, languages, gender identities, and sexual orientations. Cronbach's α for the unidimensional score was 0.83 (range between 0.76 and 0.89), and McDonald's ω was 0.84 (range between 0.76 and 0.90). Participants who did not experience sexual problems had significantly lower SDS-3 total scores (M = 2.99; SD=2.54) compared to those who reported sexual problems (M = 5.60; SD=3.00), with a large effect size (Cohen's d = 1.01 [95 % CI=-1.03, -0.98]; p < 0.001). Conclusion: The SDS-3 has a unidimensional factor structure and appears to be valid and reliable for measuring sexual distress among individuals from different countries, gender identities, and sexual orientations.