TY - JOUR
T1 - The Brief Solastalgia Scale
T2 - A Psychometric Evaluation and Revision
AU - Christensen, Bruce K.
AU - Monaghan, Conal
AU - Stanley, Samantha K.
AU - Walker, Iain
AU - Leviston, Zoe
AU - Macleod, Emily
AU - Rodney, Rachael M.
AU - Greenwood, Lisa Marie
AU - Heffernan, Timothy
AU - Evans, Olivia
AU - Sutherland, Stewart
AU - Reynolds, Julia
AU - Calear, Alison L.
AU - Kurz, Tim
AU - Lane, Jo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/3
Y1 - 2024/3
N2 - Witnessing degradation and loss to one’s home environment can cause the negative emotional experience of solastalgia. We review the psychometric properties of the 9-item Solastalgia subscale from the Environmental Distress Scale (Higginbotham et al. (EcoHealth 3:245–254, 2006)). Using data collected from three large, independent, adult samples (N = 4229), who were surveyed soon after the 2019/20 Australian bushfires, factor analyses confirmed the scale’s unidimensionality, while analyses derived from Item Response Theory highlighted the poor psychometric performance and redundant content of specific items. Consequently, we recommend a short-form scale consisting of five items. This Brief Solastalgia Scale (BSS) yielded excellent model fit and internal consistency in both the initial and cross-validation samples. The BSS and its parent version provide very similar patterns of associations with demographic, health, life satisfaction, climate emotion, and nature connectedness variables. Finally, multi-group confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated comparable construct architecture (i.e. configural, metric, and scalar invariance) across validation samples, gender categories, and age. As individuals and communities increasingly confront and cope with climate change and its consequences, understanding related emotional impacts is crucial. The BSS promises to aid researchers, decision makers, and practitioners to understand and support those affected by negative environmental change.
AB - Witnessing degradation and loss to one’s home environment can cause the negative emotional experience of solastalgia. We review the psychometric properties of the 9-item Solastalgia subscale from the Environmental Distress Scale (Higginbotham et al. (EcoHealth 3:245–254, 2006)). Using data collected from three large, independent, adult samples (N = 4229), who were surveyed soon after the 2019/20 Australian bushfires, factor analyses confirmed the scale’s unidimensionality, while analyses derived from Item Response Theory highlighted the poor psychometric performance and redundant content of specific items. Consequently, we recommend a short-form scale consisting of five items. This Brief Solastalgia Scale (BSS) yielded excellent model fit and internal consistency in both the initial and cross-validation samples. The BSS and its parent version provide very similar patterns of associations with demographic, health, life satisfaction, climate emotion, and nature connectedness variables. Finally, multi-group confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated comparable construct architecture (i.e. configural, metric, and scalar invariance) across validation samples, gender categories, and age. As individuals and communities increasingly confront and cope with climate change and its consequences, understanding related emotional impacts is crucial. The BSS promises to aid researchers, decision makers, and practitioners to understand and support those affected by negative environmental change.
KW - Bushfire
KW - Environmental Distress Scale
KW - Factor analysis
KW - Psychometric
KW - Short form
KW - Solastalgia
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85186586951&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10393-024-01673-y
DO - 10.1007/s10393-024-01673-y
M3 - Article
SN - 1612-9202
VL - 21
SP - 83
EP - 93
JO - EcoHealth
JF - EcoHealth
IS - 1
ER -