Development and psychometric testing of the online Adolescent Diabetes Needs Assessment Tool (ADNAT)
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Aim. To report on the development and psychometric testing of the Adolescent
Diabetes Needs Assessment Tool.
Background. The UK has the fifth largest paediatric diabetes population in the
world, but one of the poorest levels of diabetes control, highlighting the need for intervention development.
Design. Mixed methods following recommendations for questionnaire design and validation.
Methods. A total of 171 young people (12–18 years) participated between 2008–
2011. Methods included item selection using secondary framework analysis, item review, pre-testing, piloting and online transfer. Statistical tests assessed reliability using item-total correlations, interitem consistency and test–retest reliability; and validity using blood glucose (HbA1c) levels and the Self-Management of type 1 Diabetes in Adolescence questionnaire.
Results. The Adolescent Diabetes Needs Assessment Tool consists of 117
questions divided between six domains of educational and psychosocial support
needs. It combines reflective questioning with needs assessment to raise selfawareness to support adolescent decision-making in relation to diabetes self-care. Thirty-six of the questions provide self-care and psychosocial health assessment scores. Face and content validity of the scoring items were all positively evaluated in terms of appropriateness and readability and tests for validity found significant correlations with Self-Management of type 1 Diabetes in Adolescence and weak correlation with HbA1c, which compared favourably with Self-Management of type 1 Diabetes in Adolescence, the only comparable (USA) tool. Item response analysis validated the use of simple additive scores.
Conclusions. The Adolescent Diabetes Needs Assessment Tool combines reflective learning with needs assessment to support patient-centred clinical consultations.
Diabetes Needs Assessment Tool.
Background. The UK has the fifth largest paediatric diabetes population in the
world, but one of the poorest levels of diabetes control, highlighting the need for intervention development.
Design. Mixed methods following recommendations for questionnaire design and validation.
Methods. A total of 171 young people (12–18 years) participated between 2008–
2011. Methods included item selection using secondary framework analysis, item review, pre-testing, piloting and online transfer. Statistical tests assessed reliability using item-total correlations, interitem consistency and test–retest reliability; and validity using blood glucose (HbA1c) levels and the Self-Management of type 1 Diabetes in Adolescence questionnaire.
Results. The Adolescent Diabetes Needs Assessment Tool consists of 117
questions divided between six domains of educational and psychosocial support
needs. It combines reflective questioning with needs assessment to raise selfawareness to support adolescent decision-making in relation to diabetes self-care. Thirty-six of the questions provide self-care and psychosocial health assessment scores. Face and content validity of the scoring items were all positively evaluated in terms of appropriateness and readability and tests for validity found significant correlations with Self-Management of type 1 Diabetes in Adolescence and weak correlation with HbA1c, which compared favourably with Self-Management of type 1 Diabetes in Adolescence, the only comparable (USA) tool. Item response analysis validated the use of simple additive scores.
Conclusions. The Adolescent Diabetes Needs Assessment Tool combines reflective learning with needs assessment to support patient-centred clinical consultations.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 454-468 |
Journal | Journal of Advanced Nursing |
Volume | 70 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Feb 2014 |
Externally published | Yes |