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Adaptation and Validation of the Pet Bereavement Questionnaire (PBQ) for Chinese Population
by
Yiu, Winnie W. Y.
, Cheung, H. N.
, Wong, Paul W. C.
in
Adaptation
/ Analysis
/ Animal behavior
/ animal bereavement
/ Animals
/ Bereavement
/ companion animal
/ depression
/ Grief
/ Likert scale
/ loss
/ Mental depression
/ Pets
/ Post traumatic stress disorder
/ psychometric validation
/ Questionnaires
/ Stress (Psychology)
/ Surveys
2024
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Adaptation and Validation of the Pet Bereavement Questionnaire (PBQ) for Chinese Population
by
Yiu, Winnie W. Y.
, Cheung, H. N.
, Wong, Paul W. C.
in
Adaptation
/ Analysis
/ Animal behavior
/ animal bereavement
/ Animals
/ Bereavement
/ companion animal
/ depression
/ Grief
/ Likert scale
/ loss
/ Mental depression
/ Pets
/ Post traumatic stress disorder
/ psychometric validation
/ Questionnaires
/ Stress (Psychology)
/ Surveys
2024
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Do you wish to request the book?
Adaptation and Validation of the Pet Bereavement Questionnaire (PBQ) for Chinese Population
by
Yiu, Winnie W. Y.
, Cheung, H. N.
, Wong, Paul W. C.
in
Adaptation
/ Analysis
/ Animal behavior
/ animal bereavement
/ Animals
/ Bereavement
/ companion animal
/ depression
/ Grief
/ Likert scale
/ loss
/ Mental depression
/ Pets
/ Post traumatic stress disorder
/ psychometric validation
/ Questionnaires
/ Stress (Psychology)
/ Surveys
2024
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Adaptation and Validation of the Pet Bereavement Questionnaire (PBQ) for Chinese Population
Journal Article
Adaptation and Validation of the Pet Bereavement Questionnaire (PBQ) for Chinese Population
2024
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Overview
Despite the increasing prevalence of pet ownership in Chinese societies, standardized tools to assess grief from pet loss remain lacking. Research predominantly focuses on Western populations, creating a gap in understanding pet bereavement in Chinese cultural settings. This study aimed to adapt and validate the Pet Bereavement Questionnaire (PBQ-C) for a Chinese context to create a culturally appropriate assessment tool. A total of 246 participants with companion animal loss experiences were recruited through the university of the research team. They were invited to complete an online survey including the PBQ-C, the Depression subscale of the Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS-21), and the Inventory of Complicated Grief (ICG). Both Exploratory Factor Analysis and Confirmatory Factor Analysis were conducted to examine the psychometric properties of the PBQ-C and the findings supported a three-factor structure—grief, anger, and guilt—aligned with the original PBQ, with three items reassigned to different factors. Despite these adjustments, the PBQ-C demonstrated strong internal consistency, reflecting the reliability of the questionnaire in measuring the same construct across its items; split-half reliability, indicating its ability to produce consistent results when divided into two parts; and concurrent validity, showing that the PBQ-C correlates well with other established measures of grief. The validated PBQ-C provides a culturally sensitive tool for assessing pet bereavement in Chinese society that can promote research and counselling support for this under-researched and under-recognized type of loss of human-animal relationships.
Publisher
MDPI AG,MDPI
Subject
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