Abstract

BackgroundThe European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) is becoming a widely used tool to measure health literacy (HL), including in Malaysia. There are efforts to reduce the 47-item scale to parsimonious short item scales that still reflect the assumptions and requirements of the conceptual model. This study used confirmatory factor analysis to reduce the 47-item scale to a short scale that can offer a feasible HL screening tool with sufficient psychometric properties.MethodsA cross-sectional survey was conducted on the Malaysian population based on ethnic distribution to ensure that the short version instrument reflects the country’s varied ethnicities. The survey was administered by well-trained interviewers working for the Ministry of Health Malaysia. A total of 866 responses were obtained. Data was analysed using multi-factorial confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) with categorical variables.ResultsThe analysis resulted in a satisfactory 18-item model. There were high correlations among the 18 items. The internal consistency reliability was robust, with no floor/ceiling effects. These results represented equivalence and consistency among the responses to items, suggesting that these items were homogenous in measuring Malaysian health literacy. The strong convergent and discriminant validity of the model makes the proposed 18 items a suitable short version of the health literacy instrument for Malaysia.ConclusionsThe researchers propose the 18-item instrument to be named HLS-M-Q18. This short version instrument may be used in measuring health literacy in Malaysia as it achieved robust reliability, structural validity and construct validity that fulfilled goodness-of-fit criteria.

Highlights

  • The European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) is becoming a widely used tool to measure health literacy (HL), including in Malaysia

  • Selection of items and validity of health literacy model A confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) was conducted to produce a model with good fit indices and a set of items which are suitable for the measurement of health literacy

  • The analysis indicated that the first tier of CFA resulted in χ2 = 21, 718.433, df = 6867, p = 0.000, χ2/df = 8.007, goodness-of-fit index (GFI) = 0.664, comparative fit index (CFI) = 0.683, normal fit index (NFI) = 0.654, TLI = 663. and root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA) = 0.090

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Summary

Introduction

The European Health Literacy Survey Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) is becoming a widely used tool to measure health literacy (HL), including in Malaysia. Health literacy has the potential to be a risk factor to individuals who suffer from illness or disease if their level of literacy is low. There are more segmentised studies that consist of specific groups with various forms of measurements [4, 5]. It is vital for local authorities such as the Health Ministry of Malaysia to explore and monitor the Mohamad et al BMC Public Health (2020) 20:580

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