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Psychometric properties and invariance of the Police Stress Questionnaire in the Romanian context.

Authors :
Petreuș, Ana-Daniela
Vîrgă, Delia
Okros, Norberth
Source :
Current Psychology; Jul2024, Vol. 43 Issue 28, p24091-24105, 15p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This research evaluates the psychometric properties of the Romanian version of the Police Stress Questionnaire (PSQ), featuring operational and organizational stress scales for police officers. We conducted three studies to test the reliability and validity of this questionnaire. The first study (N = 744) aimed at adapting and validating the Romanian version on the specific population. Confirmatory factor analysis of our two-factor model, each with 20 items grouped in a second-order factor, showed the good value of the fit indices: χ²(738) = 1420.11, p <.001; CFI = 0.992; TLI = 0.992; RMSEA = 0.035 [90% CI 0.033, 0.038]; SRMR = 0.059. Subsequently, we tested measurement invariance, demonstrating that the Romanian version of this questionnaire measures workplace stress (including operational and organizational stress factors) independently of the work environment (police officers vs. correctional officers). The second study (N = 394) confirmed PSQ's convergent validity through positive correlations with stress perception, burnout, mental health complaints, and psychological distress and its discriminant validity through negative correlations with job satisfaction and work engagement. The third study tested the longitudinal invariance of the stress questionnaire for police (N = 317). The findings suggest that the PSQ is a reliable and valid tool, highlighting its significant impact on the well-being of Romanian police officers by facilitating stress management interventions through baseline and ongoing stress assessment. Future research should longitudinally assess police stress, incorporating multi-source data and diverse units, as well as exploring the impact of socio-demographic aspects for broader insights. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10461310
Volume :
43
Issue :
28
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Current Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179086826
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12144-024-06167-2