Development and Testing of Food
Safety Knowledge and Attitude Questionnaires for
Use With Consumer Audiences
, Washington
State University
Lydia Medeiros,
The Ohio State University
Assisted by:
, Washington
State U.
Gang Chen, Ohio State U.
Pat Kendall, Mary
Schroeder, Colorado St. U.
Food Safety Education: What
Should We Be Teaching?
Step one: Identification of major
themes (control factors) for food safety education
We suggest emphasis on behaviors
associated with the most prevalent foodborne
illnesses (as identified by the CDC).
Medeiros, Hillers, Kendall,
Mason. J. of Nutrition Education 33:108-113,
2001
Five Major Control Factors for
Pathogens
-
Practice personal hygiene
-
Cook foods adequately
-
Avoid cross-contamination
-
Keep foods at safe temperatures
-
Avoid foods from unsafe sources
What Food Safety Behaviors Are
Most Important in Preventing Foodborne Illness?
Step 2: Developed consensus among
food safety experts (n=24) about the most
important behaviors to reduce risks of foodborne
illnesses from home food preparation.
Medeiros, Hillers, Kendall. J of
American Dietetics Assoc 2001; 101:1326.
Summary of Expert Panel
Recommendations
Twenty-nine behaviors that are
associated with pathogens and foodborne illness
were ranked according to their importance in
preventing foodborne illnesses.
The behaviors are grouped
according to the five major control factors for
pathogens.
Food Safety Education: How Do We
Evaluate Its Success?
Step 3: The research team received
funding from USDA to develop evaluation tools for
food safety educators.
Medeiros, Hillers, Kendall,
1999-2001. USDA grant #99-35201-8126
Goal: Develop Valid and Reliable
Questionnaires
-
Knowledge of recommended food
safety behaviors
-
Attitudes regarding recommended
food safety behaviors
-
Food safety behaviors
Development of Questions
A sub-group (n=8) from the Expert
Panel attended a meeting to write at least one
knowledge and one attitude question related to
each of the 29 messages that originated from the
Expert Panel.
Review of Items
Items were reviewed by tri-state
team, cooperative extension faculty, questionnaire
experts and end-users.
Reviewers looked for ambiguous
wording, unclear format and appropriateness of
questions for a low-literacy audience.
Ambiguous items were discarded or
re-worded for more acceptable phrasing.
Assessment of Validity
-
Content validity: used
guidelines from the panel of food safety
experts.
-
Review of questions by persons
with expertise in food safety, nutrition,
questionnaire development.
-
Face validity: reviewed by wide
variety of people who represented target
audiences.
Pilot-testing the Questionnaires
-
Knowledge questionnaire: 43
items
-
Cooperative Extension groups
-
Pretest, intervention,
post-test (n=58)
-
Test, no intervention,
re-test (n=19)
-
College students
-
Prestest, intervention,
post-test (n=79)
Pilot-testing the Questionnaires
-
Attitude questionnaire: 49 items
-
Cooperative Extension n=30
-
College students
-
Non-majors (n-138)
-
Majors (n=57)
Development of Final
Questionnaires
-
Questionnaires from the
pilot-tests were statistically analyzed.
-
Findings were used to develop
shortened versions of the questionnaires.
-
Knowledge: 18 items
-
Attitude: 10 items
-
The short forms were re-tested.
Knowledge Questionnaire: Item
Analysis
-
Difficulty Scores (% answering
correctly)
-
Should be between 20 and 80%
-
Four questions of final 18
were too easy.
-
1 on personal hygiene
-
3 on cross-contamination
-
These questions were
retained in the final questionnaire because
the concepts were rated as very important by
the expert panel.
Knowledge Questionnaire:
Instrument Sensitivity
-
Changes in mean scores following
an educational program.
-
For each of the 18 questions,
there was a sig. difference (p<.05) in mean
values between pre and post test.
-
Control (with no intervening
instruction)
-
No significant difference
between test and re-test scores.
Knowledge Questionnaire:
Reliability
-
Test-retest: Coefficient of
stability for 18-item questionnaire was 0.81
-
Internal Consistency: Cronbach’s
alpha >0.75 for extension participants and
college students.
*Parmenter and Wardle, JNE
32:269; 2000
.
Attitude Scale: Item Analysis
-
Ten items met statistical
criteria for inclusion in the final food safety
attitude scale.
-
One item was accepted that was
judged too easy
-
Two were accepted that did not
meet construct validity standard
-
These 3 items were otherwise
statistically acceptable.
-
No items related to personal
hygiene were judged acceptable.
Attitude Scale: Reliability,
Construct Validity
-
Test/retest: Correlation of test
and retest responses was highly significant
(P>01) for each of the 10 items.
-
Extreme Group Comparison: group
with greater knowledge of food safety had higher
mean scores indicating a more positive attitude
toward food safety.
Attitude Scale: Internal
Consistency (Cronbach a)
|
Group |
Initial Testing |
Final Testing |
|
EFNEP |
.71 |
.63 |
|
Non-majors |
.77 |
.46 |
|
Majors |
.79 |
.45 |
|
Food Safety Class |
Not tested |
.75 |
Summary
These food safety knowledge and
attitude questionnaires are among the first to
be tested for validity and reliability.
They are relatively short and
should pose little respondent burden.
They were designed to be used
with a wide variety of audiences.
Potential Uses of Questionnaires
-
Assess subject matter knowledge
before and after a food safety educational
program.
-
Assess attitudes to help explain
food safety behavior or the likelihood that
someone will change behavior after an
educational intervention.
-
Determine food safety knowledge
and attitudes of a population for research
purposes.