LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties

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Background: Moral injury has been linked to guilt, shame, self-condemnation, and moral disorientation; however, existing measures have been developed primarily in military, veteran, or healthcare contexts and may not adequately capture identity-related moral suffering in LGBTQ+ populations. Objectiv...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: González-Rivera, Juan Aníbal, Rosario-Rodríguez, Adam
Formato: artículo
Fecha de Publicación:2026
Institución:Instituto Peruano de Orientación Psicológica
Repositorio:Interacciones
Lenguaje:inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:ojs.ejournals.host:article/519
Enlace del recurso:https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519
Nivel de acceso:acceso abierto
Materia:moral injury
LGBTQ
minority stress
psychometrics
spiritual struggles
validity
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spelling LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric PropertiesGonzález-Rivera, Juan AníbalRosario-Rodríguez, Adammoral injuryLGBTQminority stresspsychometricsspiritual strugglesvalidityBackground: Moral injury has been linked to guilt, shame, self-condemnation, and moral disorientation; however, existing measures have been developed primarily in military, veteran, or healthcare contexts and may not adequately capture identity-related moral suffering in LGBTQ+ populations. Objective: To develop the LGBT Moral Injury Scale (LGBT-MIS) and provide initial psychometric evidence for its use with LGBTQ+ adults in Puerto Rico. Method: A total of 242 LGBTQ+ adults were recruited through social media and snowball sampling. Because multivariate normality was violated, we conducted confirmatory factor analyses using robust estimation to compare a unidimensional model, a theory-driven five-factor model, and refined alternative models. We evaluated global model fit, factor loadings, item discrimination, internal consistency (α, ω, and composite reliability), convergent validity (AVE), discriminant validity (ASV, MSV), interfactor correlations, and external convergent associations with PTSD symptoms and Negative Religious Coping. Results: The unidimensional model showed poor fit, whereas the theory-driven model demonstrated mixed fit and several loadings below .65. After item refinement, a 15-item, five-factor solution—Guilt, Shame, Moral Conflicts, Religious Struggle, and Self-Condemnation—showed adequate fit, satisfactory reliability, and acceptable item discrimination. AVE supported convergent validity, and ASV supported discriminant validity; however, MSV exceeded AVE for Guilt, Shame, and Moral Conflicts, indicating partial overlap among these factors. Interfactor correlations were positive and moderate. Associations with PTSD symptoms and Negative Religious Coping provided initial evidence of external convergent validity. Conclusions: The LGBT-MIS provides promising initial support as a multidimensional measure of moral injury in Puerto Rican LGBTQ+ adults. With further validation, the scale may support research and clinically informed assessment of guilt, shame, moral conflict, religious struggle, and self-condemnation in LGBTQ+ populations.Instituto Peruano de Orientación Psicológica2026-06-03info:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersiontext/htmlapplication/pdfapplication/pdfhttps://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/51910.24016/2026.v12.519Interacciones; Vol. 12 (2026): January - December; e519Interacciones; Vol. 12 (2026): January - December; e519Interacciones: Revistas de Avances en Psicología; Vol. 12 (2026): January - December; e5192411-59402413-4465reponame:Interaccionesinstname:Instituto Peruano de Orientación Psicológicainstacron:IPOPSenghttps://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519/681https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519/682https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519/683Copyright (c) 2026 Interaccioneshttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessoai:ojs.ejournals.host:article/5192026-06-14T20:17:36Z
dc.title.none.fl_str_mv LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
title LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
spellingShingle LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
González-Rivera, Juan Aníbal
moral injury
LGBTQ
minority stress
psychometrics
spiritual struggles
validity
title_short LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
title_full LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
title_fullStr LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
title_full_unstemmed LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
title_sort LGBT Moral Injury Scale: Initial Validation and Preliminary Psychometric Properties
dc.creator.none.fl_str_mv González-Rivera, Juan Aníbal
Rosario-Rodríguez, Adam
author González-Rivera, Juan Aníbal
author_facet González-Rivera, Juan Aníbal
Rosario-Rodríguez, Adam
author_role author
author2 Rosario-Rodríguez, Adam
author2_role author
dc.subject.none.fl_str_mv moral injury
LGBTQ
minority stress
psychometrics
spiritual struggles
validity
topic moral injury
LGBTQ
minority stress
psychometrics
spiritual struggles
validity
description Background: Moral injury has been linked to guilt, shame, self-condemnation, and moral disorientation; however, existing measures have been developed primarily in military, veteran, or healthcare contexts and may not adequately capture identity-related moral suffering in LGBTQ+ populations. Objective: To develop the LGBT Moral Injury Scale (LGBT-MIS) and provide initial psychometric evidence for its use with LGBTQ+ adults in Puerto Rico. Method: A total of 242 LGBTQ+ adults were recruited through social media and snowball sampling. Because multivariate normality was violated, we conducted confirmatory factor analyses using robust estimation to compare a unidimensional model, a theory-driven five-factor model, and refined alternative models. We evaluated global model fit, factor loadings, item discrimination, internal consistency (α, ω, and composite reliability), convergent validity (AVE), discriminant validity (ASV, MSV), interfactor correlations, and external convergent associations with PTSD symptoms and Negative Religious Coping. Results: The unidimensional model showed poor fit, whereas the theory-driven model demonstrated mixed fit and several loadings below .65. After item refinement, a 15-item, five-factor solution—Guilt, Shame, Moral Conflicts, Religious Struggle, and Self-Condemnation—showed adequate fit, satisfactory reliability, and acceptable item discrimination. AVE supported convergent validity, and ASV supported discriminant validity; however, MSV exceeded AVE for Guilt, Shame, and Moral Conflicts, indicating partial overlap among these factors. Interfactor correlations were positive and moderate. Associations with PTSD symptoms and Negative Religious Coping provided initial evidence of external convergent validity. Conclusions: The LGBT-MIS provides promising initial support as a multidimensional measure of moral injury in Puerto Rican LGBTQ+ adults. With further validation, the scale may support research and clinically informed assessment of guilt, shame, moral conflict, religious struggle, and self-condemnation in LGBTQ+ populations.
publishDate 2026
dc.date.none.fl_str_mv 2026-06-03
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dc.identifier.none.fl_str_mv https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519
10.24016/2026.v12.519
url https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519
identifier_str_mv 10.24016/2026.v12.519
dc.language.none.fl_str_mv eng
language eng
dc.relation.none.fl_str_mv https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519/681
https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519/682
https://revistainteracciones.com/index.php/rin/article/view/519/683
dc.rights.none.fl_str_mv Copyright (c) 2026 Interacciones
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
rights_invalid_str_mv Copyright (c) 2026 Interacciones
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eu_rights_str_mv openAccess
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application/pdf
dc.publisher.none.fl_str_mv Instituto Peruano de Orientación Psicológica
publisher.none.fl_str_mv Instituto Peruano de Orientación Psicológica
dc.source.none.fl_str_mv Interacciones; Vol. 12 (2026): January - December; e519
Interacciones; Vol. 12 (2026): January - December; e519
Interacciones: Revistas de Avances en Psicología; Vol. 12 (2026): January - December; e519
2411-5940
2413-4465
reponame:Interacciones
instname:Instituto Peruano de Orientación Psicológica
instacron:IPOPS
instname_str Instituto Peruano de Orientación Psicológica
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institution IPOPS
reponame_str Interacciones
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