Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale

Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale

Abstract

The Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale, developed by Önsüz et al. in 2023, is a self-report instrument designed to assess physicians’ perceptions of stigma related to COVID-19 during the pandemic. The scale was created to address a gap in COVID-19 stigmatization measures specifically tailored for physicians. The development process began with an initial pool of 35 items, derived from a comprehensive literature review. This pool was subsequently reviewed by four specialists, and its content validity was assessed by 14 specialists, leading to an 18-item measure. Following a pilot study, two items were removed due to misinterpretation by physicians, resulting in a 10-item scale administered to physicians in Turkey. Both exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses confirmed a two-factor structure for the final 10-item scale. The study also reported on the reliability and validity of the measure.

Keywords

Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization, COVID-19-Induced Stigmatization, Differential Validity, Environmental Perceived Stigmatization, Personally Perceived Stigmatization, Physicians’ Perceptions

Authors

Önsüz, Muhammed Fatih; Oktar, Didem; Gedik, Sevil Aydoğan; Sungur, Sevda; Metintaş, Selma; Köşger, Ferdi; Altınöz, Ali Ercan


Purpose

The primary purpose of this measure is to quantitatively assess the perceived stigmatization experienced by physicians due to coronavirus disease 2019.

Validity

Content Validity: The content validity index for the scale, based on the remaining 18 items before the final reduction, was calculated to be 0.69.
Differential Validity: The study found that physicians who had been diagnosed with COVID-19, those with individuals diagnosed with COVID-19 in their immediate environment, those who considered resignation during the pandemic, and those who scored 55 points and above on the Stigma Scale (Yaman & Güngör, 2013) all exhibited higher scores on the COVID-19-Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale.
Criterion Validity: A Spearman’s correlation coefficient of 0.345 (P < .001) was observed between the scores obtained from the COVID-19-Induced Perceived Stigmatization Scale in Physicians and the Stigma Scale, indicating a statistically significant relationship.

Reliability

Internal Consistency: The overall Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for the scale was 0.88, with all item-total correlation coefficients exceeding 0.3, indicating good internal consistency. For the individual factors, Cronbach’s alpha coefficients were 0.875 for factor 1 and 0.766 for factor 2.
Test-retest Reliability: No significant difference was noted between the scores obtained from two administrations of the test within a two-week interval, with a correlation coefficient of 0.91 (P = .125), suggesting high test-retest reliability.

Factor Analysis

Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA): During the EFA process, items with factor loadings below 0.30 were systematically removed. An initial analysis led to the removal of one cross-loading item. The EFA was then repeated with the remaining 12 items. Subsequently, two additional items were removed because they did not align with other items within their respective sub-dimensions. The final EFA, conducted on the remaining 10 items, revealed a clear two-factor structure. These two factors collectively explained 61.66% of the total variance, with factor loads ranging from 0.66 to 0.85.
Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA): The two-factor model demonstrated sufficient goodness-of-fit indices. The values obtained were: χ² = 152.30, df = 34, χ²/df = 4.47, p = 0.00000, RMSEA = 0.107, NFI = 0.95, NNFI = 0.95, PNFI = 0.72, CFI = 0.96, IFI = 0.96, RFI = 0.93, RMR = 0.068, SRMR = 0.051, GFI = 0.91, AGFI = 0.85, PGFI = 0.56. These indices suggest a good fit of the model to the observed data.

Instrument

Test Type: Original Inventory/Questionnaire designed to measure COVID-19-Induced Stigmatization.
Format: The items are rated on a 5-point Likert-type scale. The response options are: “strongly disagree,” “disagree,” “no idea,” “agree,” and “strongly agree.” A higher score on the scale indicates an increased level of COVID-19-induced perceived stigmatization in physicians.
Language Available: The scale is available in Turkish.
Population Group: Human (Male and Female).
Age Group: Adulthood (18 yrs & older), specifically including Young Adulthood (18-29 yrs), Thirties (30-39 yrs), Middle Age (40-64 yrs), and Aged (65 yrs & older).
Population Details: The study population consisted of physicians located in Turkey.
Test Methodology: The methodology involved various psychometric evaluations, including Test Validity (Content Validity, Criterion Validity), Test Reliability (Internal Consistency, Test-Retest Reliability), and Factor Analysis (Confirmatory Factor Analysis, Exploratory Factor Analysis).

Keywords

Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization, COVID-19-Induced Stigmatization, Differential Validity, Environmental Perceived Stigmatization, Personally Perceived Stigmatization, Physicians’ Perceptions

Authors

Önsüz, Muhammed Fatih

  • ORCID Identifier: No data is Available

  • Affiliation: Department of Public Health, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, School of Medicine

  • Email addresses: [email protected]

  • Correspondence Address: [email protected]

Oktar, Didem

  • ORCID Identifier: No data is Available

  • Affiliation: Department of Public Health, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, School of Medicine

  • Email addresses: No data is Available

Gedik, Sevil Aydoğan

  • ORCID Identifier: No data is Available

  • Affiliation: Department of Ministry of Health, Odunpazari District Health Directorate

  • Email addresses: No data is Available

Sungur, Sevda

  • ORCID Identifier: No data is Available

  • Affiliation: Department of Public Health, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, School of Medicine

  • Email addresses: No data is Available

Metintaş, Selma

  • ORCID Identifier: No data is Available

  • Affiliation: Department of Public Health, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, School of Medicine

  • Email addresses: No data is Available

Köşger, Ferdi

  • ORCID Identifier: No data is Available

  • Affiliation: Department of Psychiatry, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, School of Medicine

  • Email addresses: No data is Available

Altınöz, Ali Ercan

  • ORCID Identifier: No data is Available

  • Affiliation: Department of Psychiatry, Eskisehir Osmangazi University, School of Medicine

  • Email addresses: No data is Available

Permissions & Fee and Test Year

Permissions: To obtain permission for use, please contact the Corresponding Author.
Fee: No fee is required for the use of this scale.
Test Year: 2023

References

Önsüz, M. F., Oktar, D., Gedik, S. A., Sungur, S., Metintaş, S., Köşger, F., & Altınöz, A. E. (2023). Development and validation of Coronavirus disease 2019-Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale. Alpha Psychiatry, 24(4), 138–145. https://doi.org/10.1055/a-2005-7269

Items of the Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale

This measure consists of 10 items. Specific item content is not provided, but the scale includes two factors: Environmental perceived stigmatization and Personally perceived stigmatization.

Cite this article

Mohammed looti (2026). Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Retrieved from https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/coronavirus-disease-2019-induced-perceived-stigmatization-in-physicians-scale/

Mohammed looti. "Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 5 Apr. 2026, https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/coronavirus-disease-2019-induced-perceived-stigmatization-in-physicians-scale/.

Mohammed looti. "Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale." PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, 2026. https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/coronavirus-disease-2019-induced-perceived-stigmatization-in-physicians-scale/.

Mohammed looti (2026) 'Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale', PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. Available at: https://scales.arabpsychology.com/s/coronavirus-disease-2019-induced-perceived-stigmatization-in-physicians-scale/.

[1] Mohammed looti, "Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale," PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, April, 2026.

Mohammed looti. Coronavirus Disease 2019–Induced Perceived Stigmatization in Physicians Scale. PSYCHOLOGICAL SCALES. 2026;vol(issue):pages.

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