Center for Methodology and Informatics, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Ljubljana, Kardeljeva ploščad 5, Ljubljana, 1000, Slovenia.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Jul 25;24(1):1991. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-19431-8.
Given the rapid proliferation and use of online health resources, many of which may be of dubious quality, there is an increasing need to develop electronic health literacy (e-health literacy) skills among the population of internet users. E-health literacy encompasses the skills and abilities needed to access, understand, validate, evaluate, interpret, and apply online health-related information. Measuring e-health literacy has become crucial for developing targeted interventions, assessing their impact, and producing high-quality research findings that can inform health policy and clinical practice, which can lead to improved health outcomes and potentially reducing health inequalities. The scales need to be valid and reliable so that decisions are based on high-quality data. In this regard, the issue of the measurement invariance of scales across different demographic groups has been neglected. This is critical, as assessments should be valid across different sociodemographic groups to avoid bias when comparing them. The aim of this study was to validate the Extended e-health literacy scale (eHEALS-E) on general population and investigate its structural validity and internal consistency, construct validity in terms of convergent and discriminant validity, and examine its measurement invariance across gender, age, education and social status.
The data were collected as a part of a national health literacy survey conducted by the Slovenian National Institute of Public Health. For this survey the initial eHEALS-E scale was revised in order to address its limitations and applicability to general population. Based on a nationally representative sample, the final sample for the analysis comprised 1,944 individuals who at least occasionally used one of the various internet services to obtain health-related information. Multiple group confirmatory factor analysis was used to examine the measurement invariance of the scale.
With some adjustments, the measurement model of the revised 6-dimensional eHEALS-E scale demonstrated a good fit to the data (χ = 2508, df = 282, RMSEA = 0.064, SRMR = 0.070, CFI = 0.90). The scale had good internal consistency (alpha = 0.89). Although evidence of the scale's convergent and discriminant validity was partially provided, the analysis revealed robust measurement invariance across sociodemographic groups.
With a minor limitation, the scale ensures an unbiased e-health literacy assessment across different social groups, which is crucial for interventions that aim to reduce health-related social inequalities. This ensures that the interventions derived from the assessment of reality are equally valid and effective for everyone, regardless of their sociodemographic background.
鉴于在线健康资源的快速增殖和使用,其中许多资源的质量可能存在疑问,因此越来越需要在互联网用户群体中培养电子健康素养(e-Health Literacy)技能。电子健康素养包括获取、理解、验证、评估、解释和应用在线健康相关信息所需的技能和能力。衡量电子健康素养对于制定有针对性的干预措施、评估其影响以及产生能够为卫生政策和临床实践提供信息的高质量研究结果至关重要,这可以改善健康结果并有可能减少健康不平等。这些量表需要具有有效性和可靠性,以便基于高质量的数据做出决策。在这方面,忽视了不同人口统计学群体之间量表的测量不变性问题。这是至关重要的,因为评估应该在不同的社会人口统计学群体中具有有效性,以避免在比较时出现偏差。本研究的目的是在一般人群中验证扩展后的电子健康素养量表(eHEALS-E),并研究其结构有效性和内部一致性、收敛和判别有效性方面的构念有效性,并检验其在性别、年龄、教育和社会地位方面的测量不变性。
数据是作为斯洛文尼亚国家公共卫生研究所进行的国家健康素养调查的一部分收集的。为此调查,对初始的 eHEALS-E 量表进行了修订,以解决其局限性和对一般人群的适用性。基于全国代表性样本,分析的最终样本包括 1944 名至少偶尔使用各种互联网服务获取健康相关信息的个人。使用多组验证性因素分析来检验量表的测量不变性。
经过一些调整,修订后的 6 维度 eHEALS-E 量表的测量模型与数据拟合良好(χ=2508,df=282,RMSEA=0.064,SRMR=0.070,CFI=0.90)。该量表具有良好的内部一致性(α=0.89)。尽管部分提供了量表的收敛和判别有效性的证据,但分析表明,在社会人口统计学群体之间具有稳健的测量不变性。
该量表具有轻微的局限性,可确保在不同社会群体中进行无偏的电子健康素养评估,这对于旨在减少与健康相关的社会不平等的干预措施至关重要。这确保了从对现实的评估中得出的干预措施对每个人都是同样有效和有效的,而不论其社会人口统计学背景如何。