Abstract
A sample of 209 volunteer Kuwaiti undergraduates responded to an Arabic version of the Revised Collett–Lester Fear of Death Scale with 4 subscales: Death of Self, Dying of Self, Death of Others, and Dying of Others. Reliabilities of the 4 subscales and of the grand total score ranged from 0.75 to 0.92, which is considered adequate. A 4-factor solution was congruent with the allocation of items to 2 subscales (i.e. Dying of Self and Death of Others), whereas the theorized factor structure of the other 2 subscales were only partially supported by empirical analyses. The intercorrelations between the 4 total subscale scores yielded a general factor of death and dying, denoting good factorial validity of the scale.
Notes
Note. See the items in Table 2. The Cronbach alpha reliability for the total 28-item scale was 0.924.
* All the correlations p < .01 (2-tailed).