Submit manuscript

Development and Psychometric Assessment of a Health Literacy-Based Questionnaire to Differentiate between Office Workers With and Without Non-Specific Neck Pain

Areerak K, PhD¹, Janwantanakul P, PhD¹, van der Beek AJ, PhD²

Affiliation : ¹ Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Allied Health Sciences, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand ² Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Background: Health literacy is an individual’s ability to seek, understand, and utilize health information. High health literacy leads to positive health behaviors and better health outcomes.
Objective: The primary aim of the present study was to identify domains of health literacy that was able to differentiate between office workers with and without non-specific neck pain, and the results were used to develop a questionnaire. The secondary aim was to determine the discriminative validity, internal consistency, and test-retest reliability of the questionnaire.
Materials and Methods: Three professors, 10 physical therapists, and 20 office workers took part in in-depth interviews. Data from 280 office workers with neck pain and 195 without neck pain were used for factor analysis and psychometric property assessment, respectively.
Results: Domains of health literacy relating to non-specific neck pain included accessing, understanding, appraising, applying, and extrinsic/intrinsic factors. Only the applying domain, i.e., the working and exercise behaviors of office workers, was able to differentiate between office workers with and without neck pain. The questionnaire was then developed and contained six questions. The score ranged from 0 to 24 and the higher the score indicates better health behaviors. Mann-Whitney U test showed that the total score of the developed questionnaire was significantly lower in office workers with neck pain than in those without neck pain (p<0.05), indicating acceptable discriminative validity.
Conclusion: The questionnaire based on health literacy concept was developed. The questionnaire had good discriminative validity, internal consistency, and test-retest reliability. The questionnaire is a promising tool for identifying office workers at risk for the development of non-specific neck pain.

Keywords : Health, Health behavior, Screening tool, Risk factor


All Articles Download


INFORMATION

Contact info

JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF THAILAND
4th Floor, Royal Golden Jubilee Building,
2 Soi Soonvijai, New Petchburi road,
Bangkok 10310, Thailand.
Phone: 0-2716-6102, 0-2716-6962
Fax: 0-2314-6305
Email: editor@jmatonline.com

JMed Assoc Thai
MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF THAILAND
ISSN: 0125-2208 (Print),
ISSN: 2408-1981 (Online)
The content of this site is intended for health professionals.

Submissions

» Online Submissions » Author Guidelines » Copyright Notice » Privacy Statement

Other

» Journal Sponsorship » Site Map » About this Publishing System

© MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF THAILAND. All Rights Reserved. The content of this site is intended for health professionals.