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Paper Title

A Psychometric Comparison of Three Scales and a Single-Item Measure to Assess Sexual Satisfaction

Keywords

  • sexual satisfaction
  • psychometric comparison
  • index of sexual satisfaction (iss)
  • global measure of sexual satisfaction (gmsex)
  • new sexual satisfaction scale–short (nsss-s)
  • single-item measure
  • scale reliability
  • scale validity
  • convergent validity
  • internal consistency
  • test-retest reliability
  • factor structure
  • relationship satisfaction
  • measurement tools
  • sexual well-being
  • unidimensional measure
  • bidimensional measure
  • score distribution
  • psychometric evaluation
  • sexual health assessment

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 51 | Issue : 2 | Page No : 159–169

Published On

March, 2014

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Abstract

This study was designed to systematically compare and contrast the psychometric properties of three scales developed to measure sexual satisfaction and a single-item measure of sexual satisfaction. The Index of Sexual Satisfaction (ISS), Global Measure of Sexual Satisfaction (GMSEX), and the New Sexual Satisfaction Scale–Short (NSSS-S) were compared to one another and to a single-item measure of sexual satisfaction. Conceptualization of the constructs, distribution of scores, internal consistency, convergent validity, test-retest reliability, and factor structure were compared between the measures. A total of 211 men and 214 women completed the scales and a measure of relationship satisfaction, with 33% (n = 139) of the sample reassessed two months later. All scales demonstrated appropriate distribution of scores and adequate internal consistency. The GMSEX, NSSS-S, and the single-item measure demonstrated convergent validity. Test-retest reliability was demonstrated by the ISS, GMSEX, and NSSS-S, but not the single-item measure. Taken together, the GMSEX received the strongest psychometric support in this sample for a unidimensional measure of sexual satisfaction and the NSSS-S received the strongest psychometric support in this sample for a bidimensional measure of sexual satisfaction.

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