Korean J Community Nutr.  2022 Apr;27(2):146-157. 10.5720/kjcn.2022.27.2.146.

Development and Validation of a Questionnaire on the Feasibility of a Mobile Dietary Self-Monitoring Application

Affiliations
  • 1Graduate student, Department of Food and Nutrition, College of Human Ecology, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea
  • 2Scientific officer, Functional Food Research Division, Ministry of Food and Drug Safety, Cheongju, Korea
  • 3Professor, Department of Food and Nutrition, College of Human Ecology, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea
  • 4Professor, Research Institute of Human Ecology, College of Human Ecology, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea

Abstract


Objectives
This study aimed to develop and assess the content validity and internal consistency of a questionnaire on the feasibility of mobile dietary self-monitoring applications.
Methods
We developed a feasibility questionnaire to assess the overall usage, convenience, usefulness, and satisfaction of mobile dietary applications. The initial draft of the questionnaire contained 17 items with yes/no, multiple-choice, and open-ended questions and 52 items on 5-point Likert scales. To validate the content, ten experts evaluated the relevance of the items for each subscale using a 5-point scale. We calculated the item-level content validity index (I-CVI) and scale-level content validity index (S-CVI). A total of 102 adults answered the questionnaires which reflected the experts' reviews. We conducted an exploratory factor analysis to determine the underlying structure of responses and categorized convenience, usefulness, and satisfaction. We also calculated Cronbach's alpha coefficient to examine the internal consistency of items in each subscale.
Results
The S-CVI score of the items was 0.86, and we removed items with an I-CVI score of < 0.80. We combined, revised, or separated some remaining items and added one item as per the experts' comments. As a result, we included 16 items about overall usage and 42 sub-questions. Based on the responses of the 102 adults, we performed exploratory factor analysis using the principal axis method. We retained items with a factor loading of > 0.40, resulting in a final set of 35 questions (convenience: 15, usefulness: 12, satisfaction: 8 items). The Cronbach's alpha values of the three scales were 0.93, 0.91, and 0.91 for 1) usefulness, 2) convenience, and 3) satisfaction, respectively.
Conclusions
We developed a feasibility questionnaire for mobile dietary self-monitoring applications and examined its content validity and internal consistency. Our questionnaire has the potential to measure the feasibility of mobile dietary self-monitoring applications.

Keyword

dietary self-monitoring application; questionnaire validation; mHealth; mobile health
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