1.The reliability and validity of the Malay version 17-item Diabetes Distress Scale
Chew BH ; Mukhtar F ; Sherina MS ; Paimin F ; Hassan NH ; Jamaludin NK
Malaysian Family Physician 2015;10(2):22-35
Introduction: Diabetes-related distress (DRD) refers to patient’s concerns about diabetes
mellitus, its management, need of support, emotional burden and access to healthcare. The aim
of this study was to translate and examine the psychometric properties of the Malay version of
the 17-item Diabetes Distress Scale (MDDS-17) in adult patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus
(T2D).
Methods: A standard procedure was used to translate the English 17-items Diabetes Distress
Scale into Malay language. We used exploratory factor analysis (EFA) with principal axis
factoring and promax rotation to investigate the factor structure. We explored reliability by
internal consistency and 1-month test-retest reliability. Construct validity was examined
using the World Health Organization quality of life-brief questionnaire, Morisky Medication
Adherence Scale, Patient Health Questionnaire and disease-related clinical variables.
Results: A total of 262 patients were included in the analysis with a response rate of 96.7%. A
total of 66 patients completed the test–retest after 1 month. EFA supported a three-factor model
resulting from the combination of the regimen distress (RD) and interpersonal distress (IPD)
subscales; and with a swapping of an item between emotional burden (EB; item 7) and RD
(item 3) subscales. Cronbach’s α for MDDS-17 was 0.94, the combined RD and IPD subscale
was 0.925, the EB subscale was 0.855 and the physician-related distress was 0.823. The test–
retest reliability’s correlation coefficient was r = 0.29 (n = 66; p = 0.009). There was a significant
association between the mean MDDS-17 item score categories (<3 vs ≥3) and HbA1c categories
(<7.0% vs ≥7.0%), and medication adherence (medium and high vs ≥low). The instrument
discriminated between those having diabetes-related complication, low quality of life, poor
medication adherence and depression.
Conclusion: The MDDS-17 has satisfactory psychometric properties. It can be used to map
diabetes-related emotional distress for diagnostic or clinical use.