Cross-Cultural Adaptation of the 5-Question Stigma Indicators in Trachoma-Affected Communities, Ethiopia

PLOS Mental Health

By 
Misrak Negash, 
Zerihun Tadesse, 
Fentie Ambaw, 
Michael Beka, 
Tilahun Belete, 
Melkamu Abte, 
Kebede Deribe, 
Julian Eaton, 
Eve Byrd, 
E. Kelly Callahan, 
David Addiss, 
Wim H. van Brakel, 
Abebaw Fekadu, 
David Macleod, 
Matthew Burton, 
and Esmael Habtamu

Stigma is common in people affected with Neglected Tropical Diseases (NTDs). However, no validated tools are available to assess and monitor stigma in trachoma-affected communities. We tested the cross-cultural equivalence of the 5-question stigma indicator-affected persons (5-QSI-AP) scale in persons with trachomatous trichiasis (TT), the blinding stage of trachoma, and the 5-question stigma indicator-community stigma (5-QSI-CS) scale in persons without TT, in Amhara region, Ethiopia. Conceptual, item, semantic, and operational equivalence were assessed through exploratory qualitative methods; measurement equivalence was assessed quantitatively through internal consistency, construct validity, and reproducibility. A total of 390 people participated: 181 were persons with TT, 182 persons without TT, 19 mental health, trachoma, social science, and linguistics experts, and eight interviewers. Items included in both scales were adequately relevant and important to explore stigma in the target culture. Concern about others knowing that they have TT, shame, avoidance by others, and problems getting married or in their marriage were among the issues persons with TT faced in this study community.

Subcategory: Tools