Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States of America.
Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Dec 31;14(12):e0226984. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0226984. eCollection 2019.
The home environment has a significant influence on children's physical activity and obesity risk. Our understanding of this environment is limited by current measurement tools. The Home Self-administered Tool for Environmental assessment of Activity and Diet addresses this gap. This paper describes the development and psychometric testing of its family physical activity and screen media practices and beliefs survey.
Survey development was guided by the Analysis Grid for Environments Linked to Obesity (ANGELO) framework and informed by a literature review, expert opinion, and cognitive interviews. Parents of children ages 3-12 years (n = 129) completed the HomeSTEAD survey three times over 12-18 days. Additionally, parents reported on child behaviors and trained staff measured parent and child height and weight. Five exploratory factor analyses were conducted after categorizing items into: control of physical activity, control of screen media, explicit modeling, implicit modeling, and perceived barriers and facilitators. Scales with 3 or more items underwent scale reduction. Psychometric testing evaluated internal consistency (Chronbach's alphas), test-retest reliability (analysis of variance and intraclass correlations (ICC)), and construct validity (correlations with child BMI, physical activity, screen time). An integrated conceptual model of parent physical activity and screen media practices and beliefs was developed based on recent literature to aid in the identification and naming of constructs.
Final scales demonstrated good internal consistency (median Cronbach's alpha = 0.81, IQR = 0.74-0.85), test-retest reliability (median ICC = 0.70, IQR = 0.66-0.78), and construct validity (with correlations between scale score and children's behaviors generally in the expected direction). Comparison with the integrated conceptual model showed that most identified constructs were captured.
The family physical activity and screen media practices survey advances the measurement of the home environment related to children's physical activity, screen time, and weight. The integrated conceptual model provides a useful framework for researchers studying both physical activity and screen media parenting practices.
家庭环境对儿童的身体活动和肥胖风险有重大影响。我们对这种环境的了解受到当前测量工具的限制。家庭自我评估工具用于评估活动和饮食的环境,旨在弥补这一差距。本文介绍了其家庭身体活动和屏幕媒体实践和信念调查的开发和心理测量测试。
调查开发以肥胖相关环境分析网格(ANGELO)框架为指导,参考文献综述、专家意见和认知访谈。3-12 岁儿童的父母(n=129)在 12-18 天内完成三次 HomeSTEAD 调查。此外,父母报告了孩子的行为,经过培训的工作人员测量了父母和孩子的身高和体重。将项目分为:身体活动控制、屏幕媒体控制、明确示范、隐性示范、感知障碍和促进因素后,进行了五次探索性因素分析。有 3 个或更多项目的量表进行了量表缩减。心理测量测试评估了内部一致性(Chronbach's alphas)、测试-重测可靠性(方差分析和组内相关系数(ICC))和结构有效性(与儿童 BMI、身体活动、屏幕时间的相关性)。根据最近的文献,开发了一个父母身体活动和屏幕媒体实践和信念的综合概念模型,以帮助识别和命名结构。
最终量表表现出良好的内部一致性(中位数 Cronbach's alpha = 0.81,IQR = 0.74-0.85)、测试-重测可靠性(中位数 ICC = 0.70,IQR = 0.66-0.78)和结构有效性(与儿童行为的量表评分之间的相关性通常在预期的方向)。与综合概念模型的比较表明,大多数识别出的结构都被捕获。
家庭身体活动和屏幕媒体实践调查提高了与儿童身体活动、屏幕时间和体重相关的家庭环境的测量。综合概念模型为研究身体活动和屏幕媒体养育实践的研究人员提供了一个有用的框架。