| Literature DB >> 26797897 |
Evaggelia Fappa1, Vasiliki Efthymiou2, George Landis2, Anastasios Rentoumis3, John Doupis4.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Self-efficacy has been found to have a direct relation with self-care in diabetes. Several tools have been developed and used for evaluating self-efficacy of diabetic patients, the most widely used being the Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale (DMSES). The aim of the present study was to translate, culturally adapt, and validate the Greek DMSES (GR-DMSES) in order for it to be used in the ATTICA pilot study of the SmartCare EU-funded project.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale; Greece; Self-efficacy; Validation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26797897 PMCID: PMC4735230 DOI: 10.1007/s12325-015-0278-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Ther ISSN: 0741-238X Impact factor: 3.845
Demographic characteristics of participants
| Characteristics | Total sample ( | Retest sample ( |
|---|---|---|
| Gender (%) | ||
| Male | 41.8 | 44.0 |
| Female | 58.2 | 56.0 |
| Education level (%) | ||
| Primary | 25.5 | 32.0 |
| Secondary | 30.9 | 12.0 |
| High | 33.6 | 34.0 |
| University | 9.1 | 12.0 |
| Other | 0.9 | 0.0 |
| Family status (%) | ||
| Unmarried | 6.1 | 8.0 |
| Married | 66.7 | 64.0 |
| Divorced | 8.8 | 8.0 |
| Widower | 18.4 | 20.0 |
| Health insurance (%) | ||
| Yes, public | 90.0 | 92.0 |
| Yes, private | 6.4 | 8.0 |
| Yes, both | 3.6 | 0.0 |
| Age (years), mean ± SD | 64.4 ± 10.42 | 64.1 ± 14.05 |
| Disease duration (years), mean ± SD | 12.9 ± 8.05 | 11.0 ± 6.72 |
SD standard deviation
Cronbach’s alpha for GR-DMSES (n = 116)
| Number of items | Cronbach’s alpha | |
|---|---|---|
| GR-DMSES | 20 | 0.93 |
| Diet (items 4, 5, 9, 10, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17) | 9 | 0.92 |
| Medical therapy (items 1, 2, 3, 6, 18) | 5 | 0.76 |
| Medication and feet check (items 7, 19, 20) | 3 | 0.70 |
| Physical activity (items 8, 11, 12) | 3 | 0.79 |
GR-DMSES Greek version of the Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale
Reliability analysis
| Scale mean if item deleted | Scale variance if item deleted | Corrected item–total correlation | Cronbach’s alpha if item deleted | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DMSES1 | 40.48 | 230.419 | 0.458 | 0.928 |
| DMSES2 | 40.33 | 227.771 | 0.591 | 0.926 |
| DMSES3 | 40.46 | 228.846 | 0.602 | 0.926 |
| DMSES4 | 40.09 | 226.658 | 0.613 | 0.925 |
| DMSES5 | 40.04 | 224.749 | 0.647 | 0.925 |
| DMSES6 | 39.91 | 226.134 | 0.517 | 0.927 |
| DMSES7 | 40.28 | 224.467 | 0.580 | 0.926 |
| DMSES8 | 39.85 | 222.417 | 0.572 | 0.926 |
| DMSES9 | 40.22 | 223.080 | 0.732 | 0.923 |
| DMSES10 | 40.24 | 225.444 | 0.708 | 0.924 |
| DMSES11 | 40.05 | 225.188 | 0.590 | 0.926 |
| DMSES12 | 40.12 | 223.296 | 0.639 | 0.925 |
| DMSES13 | 39.72 | 220.848 | 0.649 | 0.924 |
| DMSES14 | 39.80 | 221.019 | 0.677 | 0.924 |
| DMSES15 | 39.86 | 217.242 | 0.745 | 0.922 |
| DMSES16 | 39.76 | 223.182 | 0.627 | 0.925 |
| DMSES17 | 39.40 | 221.171 | 0.618 | 0.925 |
| DMSES18 | 40.25 | 229.879 | 0.473 | 0.928 |
| DMSES19 | 40.76 | 231.849 | 0.584 | 0.926 |
| DMSES20 | 40.41 | 229.031 | 0.562 | 0.926 |
Cronbach’s alpha = 0.929
DMSES Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale
Fig. 1Scree plot for determination of number of factors
The results of the Principal-Component Factor Analysis
| Eigenvaluea | % of variance | Cumulative % | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 8.701 | 43.503 | 43.503 |
| 2 | 1.961 | 9.806 | 53.309 |
| 3 | 1.474 | 7.370 | 60.680 |
| 4 | 1.108 | 5.541 | 66.221 |
aThe latent dimension is taken to be equal to the number of eigenvalues which are >1.0
Rotated factor matrix of the Greek version of the Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale (n = 116)
| Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | Factor 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Factor 1: diet | ||||
| 4. I am able to choose the correct food | 0.566 | 0.455 | ||
| 5. I am able to choose different foods and stick to a healthy eating pattern | 0.547 | 0.508 | ||
| 9. I am able to adjust my eating plan when ill | 0.537 | 0.540 | ||
| 10. I am able to follow a healthy eating pattern most of the time | 0.445 | 0.668 | ||
| 13. I am able to follow a healthy eating pattern when I am away from home | 0.832 | |||
| 14. I am able to adjust my eating plan when I am away from home | 0.826 | |||
| 15. I am able to follow a healthy eating pattern when I am on holiday | 0.798 | 0.347 | ||
| 16. I am able to follow a healthy eating pattern when I am eating out or at a party | 0.768 | 0.387 | ||
| 17. I am able to adjust my eating plan when I am feeling stressed or anxious | 0.684 | 0.324 | ||
| Factor 2: medical therapy | ||||
| 1. I am able to check my blood sugar if necessary | 0.651 | |||
| 2. I am able to correct my blood sugar when the sugar level is too high | 0.358 | 0.576 | ||
| 3. I am able to correct my blood sugar when the blood sugar level is too low | 0.496 | 0.620 | ||
| 6. I am able to keep my weight under control | 0.414 | 0.333 | ||
| 18. I am able to visit my doctor every three months to monitor my diabetes | 0.748 | |||
| Factor 3: medication and feet check | ||||
| 7. I am able to examine my feet for cuts | 0.736 | 0.357 | ||
| 19. I am able to take my medication as prescribed | 0.663 | 0.512 | ||
| 20. I am able to adjust my medication when I am ill | 0.662 | |||
| Factor 4: physical activity | ||||
| 8. I am able to take enough exercise, for example, walking the dog or riding a bicycle | 0.302 | 0.802 | ||
| 11. I am able to take more exercise if the doctor advises me to do so | 0.891 | |||
| 12. When taking more exercise I am able to adjust my eating plan | 0.389 | 0.696 | ||
| Variance explained (%) | 43.5 | 9.8 | 7.4 | 5.5 |
Extraction method: Principal-Component Analysis, rotation method: varimax with Kaiser normalization