Abstract:
The aim of the study was to develop a sexual satisfaction scale considering the culture and
context of Bangladesh. Multi-phased process of scale development was followed which
includes item construction, item selection and item analysis. Rigorous review of existing
literature contributed in conceptualization of the contempt of sexual satisfaction and
theoretical perspective around this concept. Initial items were constructed through mind
map, clinical experience, discussion with mental health professionals and review of
available texts and literature. After pooling, the initial items were rephrased, rearranged,
revised several times. These led to a reduced the number of items to 70, which were
grouped under eight subscales and presented for judge evaluation. Clinical Psychologist
and Psychiatrist performed as judge to evaluate suitability of the items for sexual
satisfaction inventory. Based on their evaluation, 53 items met the criteria and went for the
first draft of the scale. Two sub-scale were merged into one sub-scale (rewards subscale
and cost subscale in to "rewards and costs" subscale). The seven sub-scales of the
inventory were Overall relationship, percieved equality, rewards and costs, history of
rewards and costs, communication, subjective evaluation, and others. The scale was
administered to 83 clinical and 84 non-clinical participants using 6 point likert reponses.
During item analysis, 41 items met the criteria of discriminabilty between clinical non-
clinical participants (value significatnt at α ≤ 0.01) and corrected item total correlation (r
significant at α ≤ 0.05) and were finaly selected. Psychometric properties such as validity,
reliability, norms were assessed for the finalized scale. The scale demonstrated content,
criterions related and construct validity. Criterion related validity ensured by significant
correlation (r=-0.824, α ≤ 0.01) between the present scale and the Sexual Satisfaction
Scale (SSS). Construct validity of the scale was assessed through convergent (correlation
with SSS) and divergent (ability to discriminate between clinical and non clinical group
with F = 190.326, α ≤ 0.001) method. Internal consistency reliability was assessed though
split- half (r =0.918 , α ≤ 0.01) and Cronbach alpha (0.95) method. Both of the indicator
indicated good internal consistency of the present scale. Screening norm using percentile
method was devised based on the scores from non-clinical sample.