1. Development and validation of the Health-Friendly Activity Index: an assessment tool to comprehensively measure health-friendly activities of corporations or organisations
- Author
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Young Ho Yun, Si Nae Oh, Sujee Lee, Eun Jung Sohn, and Jin ah Sim
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Psychometrics ,030309 nutrition & dietetics ,quality in healthcare ,Applied psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,social medicine ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cronbach's alpha ,Social medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,medicine ,Humans ,Relevance (information retrieval) ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Reliability (statistics) ,0303 health sciences ,business.industry ,Corporate governance ,Public health ,Reproducibility of Results ,General Medicine ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Scale (social sciences) ,Needs assessment ,Medicine ,Public Health ,business - Abstract
ObjectivesWe developed the Health-Friendly Activity Index (HFAI) to comprehensively measure the health-friendly activities of corporations or organisations. We validated the developed tool and reported on its use as an assessment tool to improve consumers’ health-related outcomes.DesignThis was a cross-sectional study.SettingDevelopment of the HFAI questionnaire followed a three-phase process: item generation, item construction and validation with field testing. Using relevance and feasibility criteria, we developed a 105-item questionnaire with six domains (Governance and Infrastructure, Needs Assessment, Planning, Implementation, Monitoring and Feedback, and Outcomes).ParticipantsTo assess the sensitivity and validity of the questionnaire, the HFAI and Contribution Assessment Tool for Consumer’s Health (CATCH) were administered to 302 participants (151 employers and 151 employees) from 151 Korean companies.Primary outcome measuresThe CATCH measured the contribution of each company to the physical, mental, social and spiritual health of its consumers. To estimate the reliability and validity of all six HFAI domains and their respective scales, Cronbach’s α coefficients and correlation coefficients were used.ResultsEach domain and scale of the HFAI exhibited a Cronbach’s α coefficient between 0.80 and 0.98 for the employers and employees. The overall HFAI and its six domains correlated significantly and positively with all health outcomes such as physical, mental, social and spiritual status scores evaluated using the CATCH (Spearman’s correlation range: 0.37–0.68).ConclusionThe HFAI, a unique assessment tool with acceptable psychometric properties, can help corporate managers assess their health-friendly activities.
- Published
- 2021