Journal of Nutritional Science (Jan 2023)

Development and validation of the ASKFV-SE tool to measure children's self-efficacy for requesting fruits and vegetables

  • Sarah Amin,
  • Sabrina Hafner,
  • Jade McNamara,
  • Joanna Raymond,
  • Kate Balestracci,
  • Amanda Missimer,
  • Jacquelyn Potvin,
  • Geoffrey Greene

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/jns.2022.59
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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The aim of the present study was to develop the ASKFV-SE tool to measure self-efficacy (SE) towards requesting fruits and vegetables (FV) in the home and school environment with school-age children (grades 4–5) from urban, ethnically diverse, low-income households. Cognitive interviews reduced the tool from eleven items to seven. The 7-item questionnaire was tested with 444 children. The items loaded on two factors: home SE (four items) and school SE (two items) with one item was excluded (<0⋅40). The reduced 6-item, 2-factor structure was the best fit for the data (χ2 = 45⋅09; df = 9; CFI = 0⋅835; RMSEA = 0⋅147). Confirmatory factory analysis revealed that the 4-item home SE had high reliability (α = 0⋅73) and marginally acceptable reliability for the 2-item school SE (α = 0⋅53). The pre-COVID intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) was 0⋅584 (P < 0⋅001; fair; n = 57) compared to 0⋅736 during-COVID (P < 0⋅001; good; n 50). The ASKFV-SE tool measures children's SE for asking for FVs with strong psychometric properties and low participant burden.

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