Chung Tammy, Latendresse Shawn, Kennelly Nicole, Powell Margret, Sartor Carolyn E
Rutgers University; Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research.
Baylor University.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2024 Dec 4. doi: 10.15288/jsad.24-00201.
The primary aim of this study was to assess and adjust for measurement non-equivalence (bias) by sex, race/ethnicity, and co-occurring social identities (sex x race/ethnicity) for the Marijuana Effect Expectancies Questionnaire-Brief (MEEQ-B) among Black, Latinx, and Non-Latinx white youth. The second aim was to determine how group comparisons change after accounting for possible measurement bias.
Black, Latinx, and Non-Latinx white youth from the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development Study Follow-up 3 (n=8,982; mean age=12.91; SD=0.65; 47.28% female; 15.03% Black, 22.93% Latinx, 62.04% Non-Latinx white) completed the MEEQ-B. Moderated nonlinear factor analysis (MNLFA) generated positive and negative expectancies factor scores accounting for non-equivalence. Analyses contrasted group differences by sex, race/ethnicity, and these co-occurring social identities using original (unadjusted) versus MNLFA-generated scores adjusted for measurement non-equivalence.
Measurement non-equivalence was observed for positive and negative expectancies across sex, race/ ethnicity and their co-occurring social identities. MNLFA revealed between-group differences at the factor and item level. Further, comparisons of original (unadjusted) and MNLFA-generated adjusted scores revealed that unadjusted scores underestimated or did not detect some group differences in positive expectancies identified using adjusted scores, and unadjusted scores underestimated how much lower negative expectancies were in Black and Latinx relative to non-Latinx white youth.
Results highlight the need for caution when interpreting scores of a measure like the MEEQ-B that has not undergone measurement equivalence testing and demonstrate how failing to adjust for non-equivalence can result in biased estimates of positive and negative expectancies, particularly when used with diverse populations.
本研究的主要目的是评估并调整《大麻效应预期问卷简版》(MEEQ-B)在黑人、拉丁裔和非拉丁裔白人青少年中因性别、种族/族裔以及同时存在的社会身份(性别×种族/族裔)导致的测量非等效性(偏差)。第二个目的是确定在考虑了可能的测量偏差后,组间比较会如何变化。
来自青少年大脑与认知发展研究随访3的黑人、拉丁裔和非拉丁裔白人青少年(n = 8982;平均年龄 = 12.91;标准差 = 0.65;47.28%为女性;15.03%为黑人,22.93%为拉丁裔,62.04%为非拉丁裔白人)完成了MEEQ-B。调节非线性因子分析(MNLFA)生成了考虑非等效性的积极和消极预期因子得分。分析使用原始(未调整)得分与针对测量非等效性调整后的MNLFA生成得分,对比了性别、种族/族裔以及这些同时存在的社会身份的组间差异。
在积极和消极预期方面,观察到了性别、种族/族裔及其同时存在的社会身份的测量非等效性。MNLFA在因子和项目层面揭示了组间差异。此外,原始(未调整)得分与MNLFA生成的调整后得分的比较表明,未调整得分低估或未检测到使用调整后得分确定的积极预期中的一些组间差异,并且未调整得分低估了黑人和拉丁裔相对于非拉丁裔白人青少年消极预期低多少。
结果强调了在解释像MEEQ-B这样未经过测量等效性测试的量表得分时需要谨慎,并证明了不调整非等效性如何导致对积极和消极预期的偏差估计,特别是在用于不同人群时。