Background and Objectives: Poor sleep is common in community and primary-care settings, yet very brief sleep measures suitable for routine use remain limited. We developed and evaluated the five-item Promoting Evaluation and Awareness of Comfort in Sleep (PEACE) scale and examined its associations with well-being and fatigue. Materials and Methods: In a cross-sectional, clinician-mediated online survey, 312 community-dwelling adults in Italy who were not receiving active treatment for major diseases completed PEACE, the World Health Organization-Five Well-Being Index (WHO-5), and a short fatigue questionnaire. The sample was stratified and split into exploratory and confirmatory subsamples for factor analyses. Results: Factor analyses supported the use of a single total score and showed acceptable reliability. Results were broadly similar in women and men, with no evidence of item-level bias, although some model-comparison indices were mixed. Higher PEACE scores were associated with better well-being and lower fatigue. Adding PEACE to a model predicting well-being from body mass index and sex increased explained variance from 4.0% to 11.5%. Conclusions: PEACE is a brief sleep-quality measure with promising initial psychometric properties. In this sample, it was associated with well-being and fatigue and may add information beyond body mass index and sex in community and primary-care settings.
PEACE: Development and Validation of a Brief Five-Item Sleep Quality Scale for Community and Primary Care / Di Lorenzo, G., Scafuri, L., Passaro, F., Baio, R., Monteleone, E., Riccio, V., Maglione, L., Torcia, A., Tarantino, P., Calogero, A., Ruffo, A., Varlese, F., Musone, M., Imbimbo, C., De Luca, L., Romeo, G., Stanzione, F., Di Trolio, R., Strianese, O., Balsamo, R., et al.. - In: MEDICINA. - ISSN 1648-9144. - 62:4(2026). [10.3390/medicina62040757]
PEACE: Development and Validation of a Brief Five-Item Sleep Quality Scale for Community and Primary Care
Scafuri, Luca;Riccio, Vittorio;Ruffo, Antonio;Varlese, Filippo;Musone, Michele;Imbimbo, Ciro;Romeo, Giuseppe;Di Trolio, Rossella;Spirito, Lorenzo;Reia, Antonio;Buonerba, Carlo;Crocetto, Felice
2026
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Poor sleep is common in community and primary-care settings, yet very brief sleep measures suitable for routine use remain limited. We developed and evaluated the five-item Promoting Evaluation and Awareness of Comfort in Sleep (PEACE) scale and examined its associations with well-being and fatigue. Materials and Methods: In a cross-sectional, clinician-mediated online survey, 312 community-dwelling adults in Italy who were not receiving active treatment for major diseases completed PEACE, the World Health Organization-Five Well-Being Index (WHO-5), and a short fatigue questionnaire. The sample was stratified and split into exploratory and confirmatory subsamples for factor analyses. Results: Factor analyses supported the use of a single total score and showed acceptable reliability. Results were broadly similar in women and men, with no evidence of item-level bias, although some model-comparison indices were mixed. Higher PEACE scores were associated with better well-being and lower fatigue. Adding PEACE to a model predicting well-being from body mass index and sex increased explained variance from 4.0% to 11.5%. Conclusions: PEACE is a brief sleep-quality measure with promising initial psychometric properties. In this sample, it was associated with well-being and fatigue and may add information beyond body mass index and sex in community and primary-care settings.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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