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Test-Retest Reliability of the WB6Dim Digital Well-Being Tool: A 3-Day Interval Study

This study is looking at a new online tool called WB6Dim, which helps measure different aspects of your well-being. Researchers want to make sure this tool gives consistent and dependable results over time. You'll be asked to complete a short online questionnaire about your well-being, taking about three minutes, on two occasions, three days apart. The main goal is to see if your scores stay roughly the same when you haven't experienced any major life changes. If your results are similar, it means the tool is reliable and can be trusted to accurately track well-being, both for individuals and in larger studies.

At a glance

Status
Recruiting
Sponsor
Clover Link
Enrolment target
500
Start
19 Feb 2026
Estimated completion
09 May 2026

What is this study about?

This research is all about making sure a digital tool, called WB6Dim, is reliable for measuring your well-being. Imagine a set of bathroom scales; you'd want them to give you roughly the same weight each time you step on them, assuming your weight hasn't genuinely changed. This study is doing something similar for well-being. The WB6Dim tool asks you a series of questions to get a picture of your emotional and mental health.

The main aim is to check if the tool gives consistent results over a short period. If you answer the questionnaire today and then again in three days, and nothing major has happened in your life, your well-being scores should be very similar. If they are, it means the tool is dependable and accurately reflects your well-being at that moment, rather than giving random readings. This is really important because if a tool isn't consistent, it's hard to tell if someone's well-being has genuinely changed or if the tool itself is just being inaccurate.

Researchers are particularly interested in making these findings very strong and clear. They've made improvements based on previous studies to ensure the results are as precise as possible. This robust testing helps make sure that when the WB6Dim tool is used to monitor well-being, doctors, researchers, and individuals can trust the information it provides, whether it's for personal tracking or for evaluating support programs.

Key takeaways

  • Tests a digital tool (WB6Dim) for consistent well-being measurement.
  • Participation involves two short online questionnaires (3 minutes each).
  • Forms are completed online, 3 days apart.
  • Aims to ensure the tool is reliable and accurate.
  • Open to adults (18+) who can read French.
  • Your anonymous data helps improve well-being assessments.

Who may be eligible?

To take part in this study, you need to be an adult, which means you must be 18 years old or older. You also need to be able to read and understand French confidently, as the questionnaire is in French.

You'll need access to a device that can connect to the internet, like a computer, tablet, or smartphone, to complete the online questionnaires. And, of course, you must be happy to fill out the well-being questionnaire twice and agree for your information to be collected anonymously for research.

If you're under 18, or if you can't read or understand French, then this study isn't suitable for you.

Could this study suit you?

Answer these quick questions to see if you may be eligible. This is a guide only — the research team makes the final call.

  1. Are you 18 years old or older?
  2. Can you read and understand French easily?
  3. Do you have access to the internet on a device (computer, phone, tablet)?
  4. Are you happy to fill in a short online questionnaire twice?
Answer every question to see your result.

What does participation involve?

If you decide to take part, you'll be asked to complete a short online questionnaire about your well-being at two different times. The first time, which we call T1, you'll complete all 28 questions. Then, three days later, you'll complete the same questionnaire again, which we call T2. Each time, it should only take about 3 minutes to finish. There are no medications or special visits involved; it's all done online. The total duration of your active involvement will be just these two questionnaire sessions over three days.

Potential risks and benefits

There are no known medical risks associated with participating in this study, as it only involves completing questionnaires. A potential benefit is contributing to the development of a reliable tool that could help people better understand and track their well-being in the future. You are free to withdraw from the study at any time without giving a reason, and it will not affect your care in any way.

Locations (1)

  • Clover Link
    Verified postcode
    Bandol, France· Recruiting

Common questions

What is well-being?

Well-being generally refers to your overall mental, emotional, and physical health, and how happy and content you feel in life.

What does 'digital tool' mean?

It means the well-being questionnaire is given and completed online, using a computer, tablet, or smartphone.

Will my answers be kept private?

Yes, your data will be collected anonymously, meaning your personal identity won't be linked to your answers in the research reports.

Why do I need to do the questionnaire twice?

Completing it twice helps researchers check if the tool gives consistent results, proving it's reliable and trustworthy over time.

Do I need to be good with computers?

You just need basic computer skills to navigate and answer an online questionnaire.

How to find out more

quentin ALITTA

Always speak to your GP or specialist before deciding to take part in a study.

Interested in taking part?

Register your interest

Share your details and the research team for "Test-Retest Reliability of the WB6Dim Digital Well-Being Too…" will contact you if you may be eligible. Always speak to your GP before agreeing to take part.

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