Seven-Dimensional Time Quality of Life Scale correlates with mental health outcomes in psychiatric outpatients aged 12–65 years.
A systematic review assessed the psychometric properties of the Seven-Dimensional Time Quality of Life Scale (SDT-QoLS) among 608 participants aged 12 to 65 years recruited from a psychiatric outpatient setting. The study aimed to determine the scale's validity and reliability for measuring overall quality of daily time experience and its associations with key mental health indicators.
The analysis revealed a unidimensional factor structure accounting for 58.90% of common variance. Confirmatory factor analysis indicated acceptable model fit, while internal consistency was rated as good with a Cronbach alpha of 0.906. These metrics support the scale's reliability for measuring time-related quality of life in this population.
Associations between SDT-QoLS scores and secondary outcomes were examined. Results indicated a positive association with mental well-being. Conversely, the scale showed negative associations with depression, anxiety, and general psychological distress. No adverse events, discontinuations, or tolerability issues were reported, as these data were not collected or available for this psychometric evaluation.
Key limitations include the reliance on a systematic review of existing data rather than a primary randomized trial, which precludes causal inferences. The findings are specific to a psychiatric outpatient population and may not generalize to primary care or other settings. The scale may complement existing mental health assessments and support research and practice in mental health promotion, but clinicians should interpret these results cautiously given the observational nature of the evidence.