| Literature DB >> 31948444 |
Enia Zigbuo-Wenzler1, Gayenell S Magwood2, Martina Mueller2, Angela Fraser3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A poor quality diet is a well-known risk factor for many chronic diseases. However, eating a healthful diet is not always simple as many underlying factors can impede adherence. Individuals with fewer barriers are more likely to eat a healthful diet than those who have more barriers. Accurately measuring barriers to eating a healthful diet could inform personalized interventions, particularly those aiming to prevent chronic diseases. The aim of this study was to establish content validity for selected items obtained from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) database to be considered for inclusion as items on the conceptualized Dietary Health Status (DHS) instrument, which is designed to measure barriers to eating a healthful diet in adults.Entities:
Keywords: Barriers; Behavior change wheel; Behavioral domain; Content validity; Dietary practice; Establish; Factors; Instrument; Multidimensional; Theoretical domains framework
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31948444 PMCID: PMC6966857 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-4890-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Description of key concepts
| Key concept | Description |
|---|---|
| Dietary Practice | An individual’s choices in food consumption |
| Diet | The types of food one eats |
| Dietary Health Status (DHS) | The concept of an instrument to measure the multidimensional nature of individual dietary practices |
| Multidimensional | Multiple, but separate, behavioral dimensions comprising multiple factors that may influence a behavioral concept (dietary practice) |
DHS dimensions abbreviation and description. Description of the dimensions the conceptualized instrument is comprised of. These include 3 overarching conceptualized dimensions presumed to further subdivide into eight sub-dimensions
| Terms | Description |
|---|---|
| Whole Instrument | |
| Dietary Health Status (DHS) | Comprises 8 sub-dimensions |
| Three overarching dimensions | |
| Dietary Access (DA) | Comprises individuals’ financial resources, food security status, and access to local and federal governmental nutritional/food assistance programs, as well as non-governmental resources through community efforts that might influence diet. |
| Dietary Quality (DQ) | Comprises type of diet consumed, habits that might influence the quality of diet consumed [substances/drugs (i.e. illicit and non-illicit, alcohol, nicotine, marijuana)], practices such as eating out or carryout, and physical functioning. |
| Dietary State-Of Mind (DS) | Comprises an individual’s perception and knowledge about diet, health, and disease, as well as his/her mental and emotional functioning that reflect the state-of-mind regarding diet in general. |
| Eight Subdimensions | |
| Dietary Food Status (DFS) | |
| Dietary Resource (DRS) | |
| Dietary Quality Sub (DQS) | |
| Dietary Quantity (DQN) | |
| Dietary Habits (DHB) | |
| Dietary Perception (DP1) | |
| Dietary Knowledge (DKW) | |
| Dietary Psyche (mental state)(DP2) | |
Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) 14 domain version, domains description, and 84 theoretical constructs. Cane et al. [18] definition of the Theoretical Domains Framework (TDF) 14 domains a list of the theoretical constructs comprising each domain
| Theoretical Domain | Cane et al., 2012 [ | Theoretical Construct |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Knowledge1.1. | An awareness of the existence of something | 1. Knowledge (including knowledge of condition /scientific rationale) |
| 2. Procedural knowledge | ||
| 3. Knowledge of task environment | ||
| 2. Skills1.1.1.1.1.1. | An ability or proficiency acquired through practice | 4. Skills |
| 5. Skills development | ||
| 6. Competence | ||
| 7. Ability | ||
| 8. Interpersonal skills | ||
| 9. Practice | ||
| 10. Skill assessment | ||
| 3. Social/professional role and identity1.1.1.1.1.1.1. | A coherent set of behaviors and displayed personal qualities of an individual in a social or work setting | 11. Professional identity 12. Professional role |
| 13. Social identity | ||
| 14. Identity | ||
| 15. Professional boundaries | ||
| 16. Professional confidence | ||
| 17. Group identity | ||
| 18. Leadership | ||
| 19. Organizational commitment | ||
| 4. Beliefs about capabilities1.1.1.1.1.1.1. | Acceptance of the truth, reality, or validity about an ability, talent | 20. Self-confidence |
| 21. Perceived competence | ||
| 22. Self-efficacy | ||
| 23. Perceived behavioral control | ||
| 24. Beliefs | ||
| 25. Self-esteem | ||
| 26. Empowerment | ||
| 27. Professional confidence | ||
| 5. Optimism1.1.1. | The confidence that things will happen for the best | 28. Optimism |
| 29. Pessimism | ||
| 30. Unrealistic optimism | ||
| 31. Identity | ||
| 6. Beliefs about consequences1.1.1.1. | Acceptance of the truth, reality, or validity about outcomes of a behavior in a given situation | 32. Beliefs |
| 33. Outcome expectancies | ||
| 34. Characteristics of outcome expectancies | ||
| 35. Anticipated regret | ||
| 36. Consequents | ||
| 7. Reinforcement1.1.1.1.1.1. | Increasing the probability of a response by arranging a dependent relationship, or contingency | 37. Rewards (proximal/distal, valued/not valued, probable/improbable) |
| 38. Incentives | ||
| 39. Punishment | ||
| 40. Consequents | ||
| 41. Reinforcement | ||
| 42. Contingencies | ||
| 43. Sanctions | ||
| 8. Intentions1.1. | A conscious decision to perform a behavior or a resolve to act in a certain way | 44. Stability of intentions |
| 45. Stages of change model | ||
| 46. Trans theoretical model and stages of change | ||
| 9. Goals1.1.1.1.1. | Mental representation of outcomes or end states | 47. Goals (distal/proximal) |
| 48. Goal priority | ||
| 49. Goal/target setting | ||
| 50. Goals (autonomous/controlled) | ||
| 51. Action planning | ||
| 52. Implementation intention | ||
| 10. Memory, attention and decision processes1.1.1.1. | The ability to retain information, focus selectively on aspects of the environment, and choose between two or more alternatives | 53. Memory |
| 54. Attention | ||
| 55. Attention control | ||
| 56. Decision making | ||
| 57. Cognitive overload/tiredness | ||
| 11. Environmental context and resources1.1.1.1.1. | Any circumstance of a person’s situation or environment that discourages or encourages the development of skills and abilities, independence, social competence | 58. Environmental stressors |
| 59. Resources/material resources | ||
| 60. Organizational culture /climate | ||
| 61. Salient events/critical incidents | ||
| 62. Person x environment interaction | ||
| 63. Barriers and facilitators | ||
| 12. Social influences1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. | Those interpersonal processes that can cause an individual to change their thoughts, feelings, or behaviors | 64. Social pressure |
| 65. Social norms | ||
| 66. Group conformity | ||
| 67. Social comparisons | ||
| 68. Group norms | ||
| 69. Social support | ||
| 70. Power | ||
| 71. Intergroup conflict | ||
| 72. Alienation | ||
| 73. Group identity | ||
| 74. Modelling | ||
| 13. Emotion1.1.1.1.1.1. | A complex reaction pattern, involving experiential, behavioral, and physiological elements, by which the individual attempts to deal with a personally significant matter or event | 75. Fear |
| 76. Anxiety | ||
| 77. Affect | ||
| 78. Stress | ||
| 79. Depression | ||
| 80. Positive/negative affect | ||
| 81. Burn-out | ||
| 14. Behavioral regulation1.1. | Anything aimed at managing or changing objectively observed or measured actions | 82. Self-monitoring |
| 83. Breaking habit | ||
| 84. Action planning |
Fig. 1Relationship between TDF domains and COM-B; Diagram illustrates how TDF is an elaboration of COM-B; such that each domain of the TDF relates to a COM-B
Fig. 2Procedural Tasks; Flow chart to illustrate procedural tasks to establish content validity for the Dietary Health Status instrument
Domains, descriptions and study operational descriptions. 10 TDF domains and two new created domains captured by NHANES 2011–2012 items and four of the 14 TDF original domains not captured by NHANES items
| Domain | Domain Description | Study Operational Description |
|---|---|---|
| Knowledgea | Awareness of the existence of something | Awareness of the dietary guidelines, their general health and health risks factors and the benefits of sports and recreational activities |
| Beliefs about capabilitiesa | Acceptance of the truth, reality, or validity about an ability, talent, or facility that a person can put to constructive use | An individual’s belief about self-confidence, control, or performance concerning making appropriate dietary choices, staying healthy and engaging in sports and recreational activities |
| Beliefs about consequencesa | Acceptance of the truth, reality, or validity about outcomes of a behavior in a given situation | An individual’s subjective rating of his/her general health, diet, and weight and his/her belief about the outcomes of making appropriate dietary choices, staying healthy and engaging in sports and recreational activities |
| Reinforcementa | Increasing the probability of a response by arranging a dependent relationship, or contingency, between the response and a given stimulus | Internal or external responses to a person’s behavior that affect the likelihood of making appropriate dietary choices, staying healthy and engaging in sports, fitness and recreational activities |
| Memory, attention and decision processesa | The ability to retain information, focus selectively on aspects of the environment, and choose between two or more alternatives | The ability to retain information concerning diet and health and to be able to focus on making appropriate dietary and health choices |
| Environ-mental context and resourcesa | Any circumstance of a person’s situation or environment that discourages or encourages the development of skills and abilities, independence, social competence, and adaptive behavior | Any characteristics of the socio-political context, organization, and the person that discourages or encourages a person to make appropriate dietary choices, stay healthy and engage in sports and recreational activities |
| Social influencesa | Those interpersonal processes that can cause an individual to change their thoughts, feelings, or behaviors | An individual’s association with people and situations in society that dictates the way he/she thinks about things that might affect his/her diet, health, and sports and recreational activity level |
| Behavioral regulationa | Anything aimed at managing or changing objectively observed or measured actions | All the things a person does concerning their diet, health and sports and recreational activities |
| Optimisma | The confidence that things will happen for the best, or that desired goals will be attained | An individual’s confidence that things will happen for the best; never give up hope or look at the bright side of life |
| Emotiona | A complex reaction pattern, involving experiential, behavioral, and physiological elements, by which the individual attempts to deal with a personally significant matter or event | A subjective psychophysiological experience that might affect a person’s likelihood of making appropriate dietary and health choices, and engaging in sports and recreational activities |
| Skills a, b | An ability or proficiency acquired through practice | The competence or capacity that help a person routinely manage otherwise his/her diet and health in a productive manner, making appropriate dietary choices, staying healthy, and engaging in sports and recreational activities |
| Social/professional role and identitya, b | A coherent set of behaviors and displayed personal qualities of an individual in a social or work setting | A coherent set of dietary and health promotion behaviors and displayed personal qualities of an individual in a social setting |
| Intentionsa, b | A conscious decision to perform a behavior or a resolve to act in a certain way | Readiness/commitment to make healthy dietary choices, stay healthy and engage in sports and recreational activities |
| Goalsa, b | Mental representation of outcomes or end states that an individual wants to achieve | An aim or an objective a person wants to achieve concerning their diet and health |
| cHealth Identity | A person sense of self/identity in view of a health characteristic that he/she may have to identify with or has identified with | |
| cFunctional Status | Any functional limitations caused by long-term physical, mental, and emotional problems or illness that impact an individual’s ability to make appropriate life choices and to engage in activities that promote a healthy lifestyle |
aTDF original 14 domains are the first 14 domains.
bFour of the 14 TDF original domains not captured by NHANES 2011–2012 items
cTwo newly created domains to assign the items for which no TDF domain existed
Fig. 3Item Identification; Flow chart to identify items based on inclusion/exclusion criteria