A Structural Evaluation of the Expanded Multidimensional Health
Locus of Control Scale with a Diverse Sample of Caucasian/European, Native, and
Black Canadian Women
Journal of Health Psychology,
July 2001, vol. 6, no. 4,
pp. 447-455(9)
Chaplin W.F.[1]; Davidson K.; Sparrow V.; Stuhr J.; van Roosemalen E.; Wallston
K.A.
[1] University of Alabama, USA
Abstract:
The Multidimensional Health Locus of Control (MHLC) scale is a widely used
measure of the factors that people believe exert some control over their
health. The purpose of the research reported here is to provide an independent
evaluation of the structural properties of the recently expanded MHLC.
Specifically we sought to address the issue of the interdependence of the
external locus of control scales (Powerful Others, God, and Chance) and the
legitimacy of the addition of a measure of God control as a separate subscale
in the expanded MHLC. The study is based on an ethnically diverse sample of 371
community women, recruited through a random digit dialing procedure, who
responded to all the items on the expanded MHLC. Although, the three external
factors (God, Powerful Others, and Chance) are substantially correlated,
structural analyses indicate that a four-factor model consisting of the three
external scales and the Internal control scale provides the best fit to the
observed covariances among the items. We view this result as supporting the
addition of the God subscale as a separate dimension of external health locus
of control. We also find support in these results for the continued scoring of
four subscales on the MHLC rather than combining the three external subscales
on one dimension as some have suggested.