RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Sex-related differential item functioning of the Jenkins Sleep Scale: a cross-sectional study among 77 967 employees in the Finnish public sector JF BMJ Open JO BMJ Open FD British Medical Journal Publishing Group SP e074867 DO 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-074867 VO 14 IS 3 A1 Juhola, Juhani A1 Arokoski, Jari P A A1 Ervasti, Jenni A1 Kivimäki, Mika A1 Vahtera, Jussi A1 Myllyntausta, Saana A1 Saltychev, Mikhail YR 2024 UL http://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/14/3/e074867.abstract AB Objectives To investigate if the Jenkins Sleep Scale (JSS) demonstrates sex-related differential item functioning (DIF).Design Cross-sectional study.Setting Survey data from the Finnish Public Sector study (2015–2017).Participants 77 967 employees in the Finnish public sector, with a mean age of 51.9 (SD 13.1) years and 82% women.Outcome measures Item response theory estimates: difficulty and discrimination parameters of the JSS and differences in these parameters between men and women.Results The mean JSS total score was 6.4 (4.8) points. For all four items of the JSS, the difficulty parameter demonstrated a slight shift towards underestimation of the severity of sleep difficulties. The discrimination ability of all four items was moderate to high. For the JSS composite score, overall discrimination ability was moderate (0.98, 95% CI 0.97 to 0.99). Mild uniform DIF (p<0.001) was seen: two items showed better discrimination ability among men and two others among women.Conclusions The JSS showed overall good psychometric properties among this healthy population of employees in the Finnish public sector. The JSS was able to discriminate people with different severities of sleep disturbances. However, when using the JSS, the respondents might slightly underestimate the severity of these disturbances. While the JSS may produce slightly different results when answered by men and women, these sex-related differences are probably negligible when applied to clinical situations.Data are available upon reasonable request. Individual‐level survey data cannot be made publicly available, but information on the data and analyses is available upon request to the corresponding author.