Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
361270 Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior 2013 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify the psychometric properties of evaluation instruments that measure mediators of dietary behaviors in school-aged children.DesignSystematic search of scientific databases limited to 1999–2010.Main Outcome MeasuresPsychometric properties related to development and testing of self-report instruments for children 8–12 years old.AnalysisSystematic search of 189 articles and review of 15 instruments (20 associated articles) meeting the inclusion criteria. Search terms used included children, school, nutrition, diet, nutrition education, and evaluation.ResultsFourteen studies used a theoretical framework to guide the instrument's development. Knowledge and self-efficacy were the most commonly used psychosocial measures. Twelve instruments focused on specific nutrition-related behaviors. Eight instruments included over 40 items and used age-appropriate response formats. Acceptable reliability properties were most commonly reported for attitude and self-efficacy measures. Although most of the instruments were reviewed by experts (n = 8) and/or pilot-tested (n = 9), only 7 were tested using both rigorous types of validity and with low-income youth.Conclusions and ImplicationsResults from this review suggest that additional research is needed to develop more robust psychosocial measures for dietary behaviors, for low-income youth audiences.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Food Science
Authors
, , , , ,