Purpose
The MSPSS assess an individual¡¯s perception of the social support he or she receives from family, friends, and significant others (G. D. Zimet, Dahlem, S. G. Zimet, & Farley, 1988).
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The MSPSS assess an individual¡¯s perception of the social support he or she receives from family, friends, and significant others (G. D. Zimet, Dahlem, S. G. Zimet, & Farley, 1988).
12
5-10 minutes
Adolescent
13 - 17
yearsAdult
18 - 64
yearsElderly Adult
65 +
yearsInitial review completed by Tabitha Anderson, Latasha Merkerson-Miller, Deysi Paniagua, and Melissa Ivins-Lukse at the Illinois Institute of Technology (2015). Review and revisions completed by Kristian Nitsch, MS (3/4/2015)
The MSPSS is available in several langauges including Englsih, Luganda, Malay, and has been validated in a diverse sample of populations.
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American Undergraduate Students (Zimet, Dahlem, Zimet, & Farley, 1988)
** (n= 69 Duke University undergraduate students enrolled in an introductory psychology course re-tested 2-3 months after initially completing the questionnaire)
American Undergraduate Students (Zimet, Dahlem, Zimet, & Farley, 1988)
** (n= 69 Duke University undergraduate students enrolled in an introductory psychology course re-tested 2-3 months after initially completing the questionnaire)
American Undergraduate Students (Zimet, Dahlem, Zimet, & Farley, 1988)
** (n= 275 Duke University undergraduate students enrolled in an introductory psychology course; Mean Age= 18.6, SD= .88)
Pregnant American Women (Zimet, Powell, Farley, Werkman, & Berkoff, 1990)
** (n= 265 pregnant women in their third trimester; Mean Age= 25.8, SD= 5.3)
European Adolescents (Zimet, Powell, Farley, Werkman, & Berkoff, 1990)
** (n= 74 adolescents attending high school in Madrid or Paris; Mean Age= 16.7, SD= .84)
American Pediatric Residents (Zimet, Powell, Farley, Werkman, & Berkoff, 1990)
** (n= 55 first- and second-year pediatric residents; Mean Age= 29.2, 3.0)
Pakistani & Nepalese Migrants Living in Hong Kong (Tonsing, Zimet, & Tse, 2012)
Pakistani Sample
** (n= 148, Mean Age= 32.4, SD= 8.09)
Men:
Women:
Nepalese Sample
** (n=153; Mean Age= 33.2, SD= 8.90)
Men:
Women:
Patients with Schizophrenia (Living in Singapore; Used a Mandarin & Malays translated MSPSS) (Vaingankar, Abdin, & Chong, 2012)
** (n= 959 patients with schizophrenia; Mean Age= 43.2, SD= 10.3)
Total Sample:
Men:
Women:
South African Youth Exposed to Trauma & Violence (Bruwer, Emsley, Kidd, Lochner, & Seedat, 2008)
** (n= 787; only respondents with complete data sets were retained for analyses [n= 502], recruited from five high schools in Cape Town, South Africa; Mean Age= 16.22, SD= 1.84)
Undergraduate Student (American)
(Zimet, Dahlem, Zimet, & Farley, 1988)
Overall Test-Retest Reliability: Adequate (ICC=.85)
Malaysian Medical Students (Malay Version)
(Ng, Amer Siddiq, Aida, Zainal, & Koh, 2010)
Overall Test-Retest Reliability: Adequate (Spearman¡¯s rho= .77, p< .01)
Undergraduate Student (American) (Zimet, Dahlem, Zimet, & Farley, 1988)
Overall internal consistency was Excellent (Chronbach¡¯s Alpha= .88)
*Scores higher than .9 may indicate redundancy in the scale questions.
Individuals with Schizophrenia (Singapore)(Vaingankar, Abdin, & Chong, 2012)
*Scores higher than .9 may indicate redundancy in the scale questions.
Pregnant Women, European Adolescents, and Pediatric Residents (Zimet, Powell, Farley, Werkman, & Berkoff, 1990)
**Three different sample groups were used including: (1) 265 pregnant women (Mean Age= 25, SD= 5.3). (2) 74 European adolescents (49 Females, 25 Males; Mean Age= 16.7, SD= .84), and (3) 55 second-year pediatric residents (33 Females, 22 Males; Mean Age= 29.2, SD= 3.0)
*Scores higher than .9 may indicate redundancy in the scale questions.
Pakistani and Nepalese migrants living in Hong Kong : (Tonsing, Zimet, & Tse, 2012)
Internal consistency for the Total MSPSS-N (Nepalese Version) was Excellent (Cronbach¡¯s Alpha= .9)*
Internal consistency for the total MSPSS-U (Urdu Version) was Excellent (Cronbach¡¯s Alpha= .93)*
*Scores higher than .9 may indicate redundancy in the scale questions.
Hong Kong Adolescents: (Cheng & Chan, 2004)
Malaysian Medical Students: (Ng et al., 2010)
Internal consistency for the total MSPSS was Excellent (Cronbach¡¯s Alpha= .89)
*Scores higher than .9 may indicate redundancy in the scale questions.
Patients with schizophrenia (Vaingankar, Abdin & Chong 2012)
*Scores higher than .9 may indicate redundancy in the scale questions.
Convergent validity:
American undergraduate students: (Zimet et al., 1988; n = 275, mean age = 18.6 (0.88) years)
Pakistani and Nepalese migrants living in Hong Kong : (Tonsing, Zimet, and Tse, 2012)
Arab immigrant women in the United States: (Aroian, Templin, & Ramaswamy, 2010)
Discriminant validity:
South African youth exposed to trauma and violence: (Bruwer, Emsley, Kidd, Lochner & Seedat 2008)
Pakistani and Nepalese migrants living in Hong Kong : (Tonsing, Zimet, and Tse, 2012)
Malaysian Medical Students: (Ng et al., 2010)
Arab women immigrants in the United States: (Aroian, Templin, & Ramaswamy, 2010)
Singapore Patients with schizophrenia (Vaingankar, Abdin & Chong 2012)
Arab women immigrants in the United States: (Aroian, Templin, & Ramaswamy, 2010)
Aroian, K., Templin, T., & Ramaswamy, V. (2010). Adaptation and Psychometric Evaluation of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support for Arab Immigrant Women. Health Care for Women International, 31(2), 153¨C169.
Bruwer, B., Emsley, R., Kidd, M., Lochner, C., & Seedat, S. (2008). Psychometric properties of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support in youth. Comprehensive Psychiatry, 49(2), 195-201.
Cheng, T. C. & Chan A. C. M. (2004). The multidimensional scale of perceived social support: dimensionality and age and gender differences in adolescents. Personality and Individual Difference, 37, 1359-1369.
Ng, C.G, Siddiq, A., Aida, S., Zainal, N., & Koh, O. (2011). Validation of the Malay version of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support (MSPSS-M) among a group of medical students in Faculty of Medicine, University Malaya. Asian Journal of Psychiatry, 3(1), 3-6.
Tonsing, K., Gregory, G. D., & Tse, S. (2012). Assessing social support among South Asians: The multidimensional scale of perceived social support. Asian Journal of Psychiatry, 5, 164-168.
Vaingankar, J. A., Abdin, E., & Chong, S. A. (2012). Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses of the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support in patients with schizophrenia. Comprehensive psychiatry, 53(3), 286-291.
Zimet, G. D., Dahlem, N. W., Zimet, S. G., & Farley, G. K. (1988). The multidimensional scale of perceived social support. Journal of personality assessment, 52(1), 30-41.
Zimet, G. D., Powell, S. S., Farley, G. K., Werkman, S., & Berkoff, K. A. (1990). Psychometric characteristics of the multidimensional scale of perceived social support. Journal of personality assessment, 55(3-4), 610-617.
We have reviewed more than 500 instruments for use with a number of diagnoses including stroke, spinal cord injury and traumatic brain injury among several others.