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Reducing Sun Exposure for Prevention of Skin Cancers: Factorial Invariance and Reliability of the Self-Efficacy Scale for Sun Protection.

Authors :
Babbin SF
Yin HQ
Rossi JS
Redding CA
Paiva AL
Velicer WF
Source :
Journal of skin cancer [J Skin Cancer] 2015; Vol. 2015, pp. 862732. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Sep 17.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

The Self-Efficacy Scale for Sun Protection consists of two correlated factors with three items each for Sunscreen Use and Avoidance. This study evaluated two crucial psychometric assumptions, factorial invariance and scale reliability, with a sample of adults (N = 1356) participating in a computer-tailored, population-based intervention study. A measure has factorial invariance when the model is the same across subgroups. Three levels of invariance were tested, from least to most restrictive: (1) Configural Invariance (nonzero factor loadings unconstrained); (2) Pattern Identity Invariance (equal factor loadings); and (3) Strong Factorial Invariance (equal factor loadings and measurement errors). Strong Factorial Invariance was a good fit for the model across seven grouping variables: age, education, ethnicity, gender, race, skin tone, and Stage of Change for Sun Protection. Internal consistency coefficient Alpha and factor rho scale reliability, respectively, were .84 and .86 for Sunscreen Use, .68 and .70 for Avoidance, and .78 and .78 for the global (total) scale. The psychometric evidence demonstrates strong empirical support that the scale is consistent, has internal validity, and can be used to assess population-based adult samples.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2090-2905
Volume :
2015
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of skin cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26457203
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1155/2015/862732