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Development and validation of a health literacy scale for family caregivers of older people with chronic illness

Development and validation of a health literacy scale for family caregivers of older people with chronic illness
Development and validation of a health literacy scale for family caregivers of older people with chronic illness

Background: family caregivers (FCs) encounter a variety of health problems in older people with chronic illness, necessitating a certain level of health literacy to access, understand, appraise and apply health information and services. This study aimed to develop and validate a scale for measuring health literacy among FCs of older people with chronic illness.

Methods: concept mapping was first employed to develop a conceptual model of health literacy of FCs. Scale domains were derived from the conceptual model, and item generation was performed using deductive and inductive methods. Quantitative methods, including merging scale dimensions and items, expert reviews, cognitive interviews, and item reduction analysis, were used to refine the scale. Confirmatory factor analysis was employed to validate the scale's structure. Concurrent validity, internal consistency, and test-retest reliability were also examined.

Results: a 20-dimension conceptual model was developed, and 60 items were generated for the scale. Expert review (content validity index > 0.85) and cognitive interview with FCs confirmed the relevance and clarity of the majority of the generated scale items. Confirmatory factor analysis with 451 FCs of older people with chronic illness supported a 5-factor structure (symptom management, daily personal care and household tasks, care coordination, communication and relationship with the care recipient, and self-care of caregivers) with 42 finalized scale items, including four levels of health literacy skills (accessing, understanding, appraising and applying health information). Concurrent validity with the European Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) was satisfactory (r = 0.67, p < 0.01). The Cronbach's α coefficient of the scale was 0.96, with subscales ranging from 0.84 to 0.91. The two-week test-retest reliability was 0.77 (p < 0.01).

Conclusions: this study developed a conceptual model explaining the concept and factors of health literacy among FCs of older people with chronic illness that could provide the groundwork for future studies in developing relevant evidence-based interventions. A new Health Literacy Scale-Family Caregiver (HLS-FC) with satisfactory psychometric properties was developed in this study, which can be utilized to identify caregivers with insufficient health literacy and facilitate timely interventions by healthcare professionals.

Caregiver, Health literacy, Older people, Psychometric validation
1472-6955
Kor, Patrick Pui Kin
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Yu, Clare Tsz Kiu
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Li, Yaqin
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Tsang, Alex Pak Lik
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Tan, Lexi Han Zhi
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Lam, Simon Ching
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Lee, Paul Hong
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Liu, Justina Yat Wa
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Leung, Angela Yee Man
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Lee, Ka Ching
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Kor, Patrick Pui Kin
a53553a2-eb35-4ba5-9e9a-0fee2a7c1e3f
Yu, Clare Tsz Kiu
080ae06b-774c-479e-8bb5-396cb7915c44
Li, Yaqin
a66e27b5-f3fc-4911-9e46-345ce7117e4d
Tsang, Alex Pak Lik
fb2e432b-54df-485e-b6f8-0ac506c9b2f8
Tan, Lexi Han Zhi
2a4a6178-7c8e-46a1-92cf-8f73752024be
Lam, Simon Ching
72f4d1ac-b686-4044-ac7d-677205dd25cf
Lee, Paul Hong
02620eab-ae7f-4a1c-bad1-8a50e7e48951
Liu, Justina Yat Wa
6274f844-c636-44ad-aa6e-4d83a3225c7a
Leung, Angela Yee Man
6a57ef05-1acb-4145-b195-0607db52d21c
Lee, Ka Ching
0347c04c-4855-4187-ab6f-2a877ad24e05

Kor, Patrick Pui Kin, Yu, Clare Tsz Kiu, Li, Yaqin, Tsang, Alex Pak Lik, Tan, Lexi Han Zhi, Lam, Simon Ching, Lee, Paul Hong, Liu, Justina Yat Wa, Leung, Angela Yee Man and Lee, Ka Ching (2024) Development and validation of a health literacy scale for family caregivers of older people with chronic illness. BMC Nursing, 23 (1), [447]. (doi:10.1186/s12912-024-02057-x).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: family caregivers (FCs) encounter a variety of health problems in older people with chronic illness, necessitating a certain level of health literacy to access, understand, appraise and apply health information and services. This study aimed to develop and validate a scale for measuring health literacy among FCs of older people with chronic illness.

Methods: concept mapping was first employed to develop a conceptual model of health literacy of FCs. Scale domains were derived from the conceptual model, and item generation was performed using deductive and inductive methods. Quantitative methods, including merging scale dimensions and items, expert reviews, cognitive interviews, and item reduction analysis, were used to refine the scale. Confirmatory factor analysis was employed to validate the scale's structure. Concurrent validity, internal consistency, and test-retest reliability were also examined.

Results: a 20-dimension conceptual model was developed, and 60 items were generated for the scale. Expert review (content validity index > 0.85) and cognitive interview with FCs confirmed the relevance and clarity of the majority of the generated scale items. Confirmatory factor analysis with 451 FCs of older people with chronic illness supported a 5-factor structure (symptom management, daily personal care and household tasks, care coordination, communication and relationship with the care recipient, and self-care of caregivers) with 42 finalized scale items, including four levels of health literacy skills (accessing, understanding, appraising and applying health information). Concurrent validity with the European Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) was satisfactory (r = 0.67, p < 0.01). The Cronbach's α coefficient of the scale was 0.96, with subscales ranging from 0.84 to 0.91. The two-week test-retest reliability was 0.77 (p < 0.01).

Conclusions: this study developed a conceptual model explaining the concept and factors of health literacy among FCs of older people with chronic illness that could provide the groundwork for future studies in developing relevant evidence-based interventions. A new Health Literacy Scale-Family Caregiver (HLS-FC) with satisfactory psychometric properties was developed in this study, which can be utilized to identify caregivers with insufficient health literacy and facilitate timely interventions by healthcare professionals.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 June 2024
Published date: 1 July 2024
Keywords: Caregiver, Health literacy, Older people, Psychometric validation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 493392
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/493392
ISSN: 1472-6955
PURE UUID: f0e30b8a-09e3-4b78-bab7-1541e6deefe6
ORCID for Paul Hong Lee: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5729-6450

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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2024 16:44
Last modified: 03 Sep 2024 02:09

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Contributors

Author: Patrick Pui Kin Kor
Author: Clare Tsz Kiu Yu
Author: Yaqin Li
Author: Alex Pak Lik Tsang
Author: Lexi Han Zhi Tan
Author: Simon Ching Lam
Author: Paul Hong Lee ORCID iD
Author: Justina Yat Wa Liu
Author: Angela Yee Man Leung
Author: Ka Ching Lee

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