Abstract

BackgroundThe purpose of the study was to develop and test the initial psychometric properties of the ATTitudes and Avatars INstrument (ATTAIN). The integrated behavior model guided instrument development to measure the young adolescent boys’ attitudes, intentions and actions to change their bodies.MethodsAn adolescent health expert panel and young adolescent boys were recruited to test for content validity. Fifty-nine boys 11 to 14 years of age were recruited at a middle school in the USA during physical education class to conduct a pilot study to test for internal consistency and test-retest reliability.ResultsThe ATTAIN was found to have high content validity, slightly below recommended levels for internal consistency, and varied test-retest reliability.ConclusionThe long-term goal of the development and testing of the ATTAIN is to make it available to researchers and professionals to screen and focus on adolescents’ perceptions of their bodies and using those perceptions to attain and maintain healthy bodies. The results of this study suggest preliminarily a theoretically derived instrument with appropriate content for young adolescent boys and variable reliability. The attitudes, intentions, and actions survey items and avatars as measured by the ATTAIN, were meaningful to the boys. The ATTAIN has potential to be used as a screening instrument for young adolescents boys and understanding their attitudes toward their bodies; however, it will require continued development and testing to establish construct and discriminant validity.

Highlights

  • The purpose of the study was to develop and test the initial psychometric properties of the ATTitudes and Avatars INstrument (ATTAIN)

  • Attitudes and avatars instrument: development and initial testing Body mass index (BMI) is limited to body weight and as such is an incomplete measure for appropriate referral and follow up for adolescent weight issues

  • A theoretically derived, reliable, and valid instrument that captures adolescents’ perceptions of their weight, bodies, and body parts is needed to augment weight screening

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The purpose of the study was to develop and test the initial psychometric properties of the ATTitudes and Avatars INstrument (ATTAIN). The integrated behavior model guided instrument development to measure the young adolescent boys’ attitudes, intentions and actions to change their bodies. Over the past 30 years, childhood obesity has tripled, with more than one-third of children and adolescents in 2008 being overweight or obese [2, 3]. The prevalence of above-normal body weight in adolescents is a vexing and complex public health problem in the United States and internationally. Ogden and colleagues [3] found from 2009–2010 the prevalence of obesity higher among adolescents than preschool-aged children (18.4 % ages 12–19, 18 % ages 6–11, 12.1 % ages 2–5) and higher among boys than among girls (18.6 % of boys, 15 % of girls). In addition to obese and overweight adolescents not learning to their full potential there is a likelihood of them

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call