Validation of a two-item short form of the perceived health competence scale.

dc.contributor.author

Nair, Devika

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Pennings, Jacquelyn S

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Bosworth, Hayden B

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Freedland, Kenneth E

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Kripalani, Sunil

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Gordon, Elisa J

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Birdee, Gurjeet S

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Bachmann, Justin M

dc.date.accessioned

2026-01-09T16:29:01Z

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2026-01-09T16:29:01Z

dc.date.issued

2025-11

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BACKGROUND: Perceived health competence is a construct encompassing individuals’ confidence in managing their health and health-related behaviors. The 8-item Perceived Health Competence Scale (PHCS-8), developed to measure this construct, has established psychometric properties including test-retest reliability and predictive validity for health behaviors and clinical outcomes. We aimed to validate the 2-item Perceived Health Competence Scale (PHCS-2), an abbreviated version of the PHCS-8, for use in clinical and research settings where respondent burden is a primary concern. METHODOLOGY: We conducted a psychometric validation study using pooled data from 482 participants across two cohort studies conducted in an integrative medicine clinic. Participants completed the PHCS-8, PROMIS Global Health Scale (yielding physical and mental health T-scores), Socially Desirable Response Set Five-Item Survey (SDRS-5), and sociodemographic information. Psychometric evaluation included internal consistency reliability, exploratory factorial validity analysis, Bland-Altman analysis of instrument agreement, convergent validity through correlation analysis, and known-groups validity across demographic and health status subgroups. RESULTS: Study participants had a mean age of 51 years (SD = 13.2), were 81% female, and predominantly college-educated (86%). The PHCS-2 demonstrated appropriate response distributions with optimal inter-item correlation (r = 0.31) and factorial validity (factor loadings: 0.569, 0.522). Criterion validity was supported by strong correlation with the PHCS-8 (r = 0.80) and minimal systematic bias in Bland-Altman analysis (mean difference = 0.032, 95% limits: -0.792 to 0.856). Convergent validity was demonstrated through moderate correlations with PROMIS physical health (r = 0.463) and mental health (r = 0.391) T-scores. Known-groups validity was confirmed by significant differences between individuals with above-average versus below-average physical health (Cohen’s d = 0.92) and mental health (Cohen’s d = 0.62). Discriminant validity was supported by no significant correlation with social desirability (SDRS-5, r = 0.013, p > 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The PHCS-2 represents a psychometrically sound, brief measure of perceived health competence that maintains strong concordance with the full PHCS-8 while substantially reducing respondent burden. This validated instrument provides an efficient clinical screening method to identify patients with lower perceived health competence who may benefit from targeted self-management support interventions.

dc.identifier

10.1186/s41687-025-00963-5

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2509-8020

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2509-8020

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33902

dc.language

eng

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Journal of patient-reported outcomes

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10.1186/s41687-025-00963-5

dc.rights.uri

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

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Health behavior

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Perceived health competence

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Psychometrics

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Self-efficacy

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Validation studies

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Validation of a two-item short form of the perceived health competence scale.

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Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Bosworth, Hayden B|0000-0001-6188-9825

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131

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1

pubs.organisational-group

Duke

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School of Medicine

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Basic Science Departments

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Clinical Science Departments

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Institutes and Centers

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Medicine

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences

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Medicine, General Internal Medicine

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Duke Clinical Research Institute

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University Initiatives & Academic Support Units

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Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development

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Initiatives

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Duke Science & Society

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Population Health Sciences

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Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Behavioral Medicine & Neurosciences

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Duke-Margolis Institute for Health Policy

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

9

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