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Study on the Development of an Infectious Disease-Specific Health Literacy Scale in the Chinese Population

To develop a scale to assess infectious disease-specific health literacy (IDSHL) in China and test its initial psychometric properties. Methods: Item pooling, reduction and assessment of psychometric properties were conducted. The scale was divided into 2 subscales; subscale 1 assessed an individual's skills to prevent/treat infectious diseases and subscale 2 assessed cognitive ability. In 2014, 9000 people aged 15-69 years were randomly sampled from 3 provinces and asked to complete the IDSHL questionnaire. Cronbach's á was calculated to assess reliability. Exploratory factor analysis, t-test, correlations, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve and logistic regression were used to examine validity. Results: Each of the 22 items in subscale 1 had a content validity index >0.8. In total, 8858 people completed the scale. The principal components factor analysis suggested a 5-factor solution. All factor loadings were >0.40 ( p<0.05). The IDSHL score was 22.07±7.91 (mean±SD; total score=38.62). Significant differences were observed across age (r=.0.276), sex (males: 21.65±8.03; females: 22.47±7.78), education (14.16±8.19 to 26.55±6.26), 2-week morbidity (present: 20.62±8.17, absent: 22.35±7.83; p<0.001) and health literacy of the highest and lowest 27% score groups (all p<0.05). The ROC curve indicated that 76.2% of respondents were adequate in IDSHL. Binary logistic regression analysis revealed 12 predictors of IDSHL adequacy (p<0.05). Among the 22 remaining items, Corrected Item-Total Correlation ranged from 0.316 to 0.504 and Cronbach's á values ranged from 0.754 to 0.810 if the items were deleted. The overall á value was 0.839 and the difficulty coefficient ranged from 1.19 to 4.08. For subscale 2, there were statistically significant differences between the mean scores of those with a correct/incorrect answer (all p<0.001). Conclusions: The newly developed 28-item scale provides an efficient, psychometrically sound and userfriendly measure of IDSHL in the Chinese population.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ETSU/oai:dc.etsu.edu:etsu-works-16562
Date01 August 2016
CreatorsTian, Xiangyang, Di, Zeqing, Cheng, Yulan, Ren, Xuefeng, Chai, Yan, Ding, Fan, Chen, Jibin, Southerland, Jodi L., Cui, Zengwei, Hu, Xiuqiong, Xu, Jingdong, Xu, Shuiyang, Qian, Guohong, Wang, Liang
PublisherDigital Commons @ East Tennessee State University
Source SetsEast Tennessee State University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
SourceETSU Faculty Works

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