Hardiness in high-stress occupations: A psychometric evaluation of the Dispositional Resilience Scale-15 in South African first responders
Loading...
Date
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SAGE Publications Ltd
Abstract
Hardiness, a psychological resilience trait comprising commitment, control, and challenge, has been widely studied in high-stress occupational groups. However, limited research has evaluated the psychometric properties of the Dispositional Resilience Scale-15 (DRS-15) in low- and middle-income contexts. This study investigated the psychometric of the DRS-15 in a sample of South African first responders (n = 429). Psychometric paradigms used included Classical Test Theory (CTT), Mokken scale analysis (MSA), and Rasch modeling. MSA and confirmatory factor analyses supported a unidimensional structure for the DRS-15. Item 4 exhibited poor psychometric performance across Rasch, MSA and CTT indices. The DRS without item 4 demonstrated strong internal consistency, satisfactory item-total correlations and factor loadings. The DRS without item 4 is a reliable and valid measure of psychological hardiness among South African first responders. Findings highlight the utility of integrating various complementary psychometric paradigms.
Description
Citation
Pretorius, T.B. and Padmanabhanunni, A., 2026. Hardiness in high-stress occupations: A psychometric evaluation of the Dispositional Resilience Scale-15 in South African first responders. Journal of Health Psychology, p.13591053261435689.