Abstract
Health literacy (HL) is associated with early prevention of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), but a targeted comprehensive assessment tool is lacking. This study aims to psychometrically evaluate the MCI-HLA scale. This observational study was conducted in a tertiary-level hospital's physical examination center from October to December 2020. The middle-aged and older adults (N=550, aged 41-80 years) completed the MCI-HLA questionnaire online. The validity of the MCI-HLA scale was assessed through content validity, exploratory factor analysis, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), convergent validity, and discriminant validity. The internal reliability was measured using Cronbach's alpha, McDonald's Omega coefficient, and split-half reliability. 5 factors emerged, naming: Function (7 items), Knowledge (8 items), Practice (8 items), Attitude (4 items), and Motivation (3 items), explaining 72.42% of variance. The CFA revealed that five factors of the MCI-HLA scale fit well (χ2/df=4.076, RMSEA=0.078, SRMR=0.057, CFI=0.904, TLI=0.894). Good convergent validity was suggested by the Average Variance Extracted (AVE) values exceeding 0.50. Discriminant validity was demonstrated for all the square root AVE were higher than the correlation between the two factors. Internal consistency was high (Cronbach's alpha=0.875, McDonald's Omega coefficient=0.910, split-half reliability=0.949). The MCI-HLA scale takes on high reliability and validity, suitable for assessing MCI-related health literacy in middle-aged and older adults. The MCI-HLA scale could enhance MCI health literacy assessment and supports tailored interventions for improved outcomes.
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