Huizinga Mary Margaret, Elasy Tom A, Wallston Kenneth A, Cavanaugh Kerri, Davis Dianne, Gregory Rebecca P, Fuchs Lynn S, Malone Robert, Cherrington Andrea, Dewalt Darren A, Buse John, Pignone Michael, Rothman Russell L
Division of General Internal Medicine and Public Health, Department of Medicine, Center for Health Services Research, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2008 May 1;8:96. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-8-96.
Low literacy and numeracy skills are common. Adequate numeracy skills are crucial in the management of diabetes. Diabetes patients use numeracy skills to interpret glucose meters, administer medications, follow dietary guidelines and other tasks. Existing literacy scales may not be adequate to assess numeracy skills. This paper describes the development and psychometric properties of the Diabetes Numeracy Test (DNT), the first scale to specifically measure numeracy skills used in diabetes.
The items of the DNT were developed by an expert panel and refined using cognitive response interviews with potential respondents. The final version of the DNT (43 items) and other relevant measures were administered to a convenience sample of 398 patients with diabetes. Internal reliability was determined by the Kuder-Richardson coefficient (KR-20). An a priori hypothetical model was developed to determine construct validity. A shortened 15-item version, the DNT15, was created through split sample analysis.
The DNT had excellent internal reliability (KR-20 = 0.95). The DNT was significantly correlated (p < 0.05) with education, income, literacy and math skills, and diabetes knowledge, supporting excellent construct validity. The mean score on the DNT was 61% and took an average of 33 minutes to complete. The DNT15 also had good internal reliability (KR-20 = 0.90 and 0.89). In split sample analysis, correlations of the DNT-15 with the full DNT in both sub-samples was high (rho = 0.96 and 0.97, respectively).
The DNT is a reliable and valid measure of diabetes related numeracy skills. An equally adequate but more time-efficient version of the DNT, the DNT15, can be used for research and clinical purposes to evaluate diabetes related numeracy.
低读写能力和计算能力很常见。足够的计算能力在糖尿病管理中至关重要。糖尿病患者运用计算能力来解读血糖仪、服药、遵循饮食指南及完成其他任务。现有的读写能力量表可能不足以评估计算能力。本文描述了糖尿病计算能力测试(DNT)的开发及心理测量特性,这是首个专门用于测量糖尿病相关计算能力的量表。
DNT的项目由一个专家小组开发,并通过与潜在受访者的认知反应访谈进行完善。DNT的最终版本(43个项目)及其他相关测量工具被施用于398名糖尿病患者的便利样本。内部信度由库德-理查森系数(KR-20)确定。开发了一个先验假设模型来确定结构效度。通过拆分样本分析创建了一个缩短的15项版本,即DNT15。
DNT具有出色的内部信度(KR-20 = 0.95)。DNT与教育程度、收入、读写能力和数学技能以及糖尿病知识显著相关(p < 0.05),支持其具有出色的结构效度。DNT的平均得分是61%,完成测试平均用时33分钟。DNT15也具有良好的内部信度(KR-20 = 0.90和0.89)。在拆分样本分析中,两个子样本中DNT-15与完整DNT的相关性都很高(rho分别为0.96和0.97)。
DNT是一种可靠且有效的糖尿病相关计算能力测量工具。DNT的一个同样适用但更省时的版本DNT15,可用于研究和临床目的,以评估糖尿病相关计算能力。