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      Evaluation of the mental health continuum-short form (MHC-SF) in setswana-speaking South Africans.

      Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy
      Adaptation, Psychological, Adult, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cross-Cultural Comparison, Female, Health Status Indicators, Health Surveys, Humans, Internal-External Control, Language, Male, Mental Disorders, epidemiology, ethnology, psychology, Mental Health, statistics & numerical data, Middle Aged, Psychometrics, Quality of Life, Questionnaires, Reproducibility of Results, Rural Population, Self Efficacy, South Africa, Translating, Urban Population

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          Abstract

          A continuous assessment and a categorical diagnosis of the presence of mental health, described as flourishing, and the absence of mental health, characterized as languishing, is applied to a random sample of 1050 Setswana-speaking adults in the Northwest province of South Africa. Factor analysis revealed that the mental health continuum-short form (MHC-SF) replicated the three-factor structure of emotional, psychological and social well-being found in US samples. The internal reliability of the overall MHC-SF Scale was 0.74. The total score on the MHC-SF correlated 0.52 with a measure of positive affect, between 0.35 and 0.40 with measures of generalized self-efficacy and satisfaction with life, and between 0.30 and 0.35 with measures of coping strategies, sense of coherence, and community collective self-efficacy. The total score on the MHC-SF correlated -0.22 with the total score on the General Health Questionnaire. Criteria for the categorical diagnosis were applied, and findings revealed that 20% were flourishing, 67.8% were moderately mentally healthy, and 12.2% were languishing. Confirmatory factor analysis supported the hypothesized two-continua model of mental health and mental illness found in the USA. Copyright (c) 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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