Measuring Instruments for Media Health Literacy: A Systematic Review of Psychometric Properties
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Differences between Health Literacy, eHealth Literacy, and Media Health Literacy
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Selection Criteria
2.4. Effect Measures
2.5. Data Extraction (Selection and Codification)
2.6. Data Summarization Strategy
3. Results
3.1. Evaluation of the Level of Bias
3.2. Measuring Instruments
Cite | Scale | Language | Target Population | Previous Scale | Number of Dimensions and Items | Dimensions | Type of Scale and Response | Results of Psychometric Properties |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primack et al. [32] | Smoking Media Literacy Scale for Adolescents (SML) | English | 1211 high school students (14 to 18 years) | Own elaboration based on the available literature on media literacy on the one hand, and tobacco consumption on the other. | 1-factor scale with 18 items | 1-factor scale | The 4-point Likert-type scale (strongly disagree, disagree, agree, strongly agree). The scale is 10 points by dividing the raw score of 54 points by 5.4. | Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α 1 = 0.87 |
Page, et al. [36] | Smoking Media Literacy in Vietnamese Adolescents | Vietnamese | 2000 students in grades 10–12 in two high schools (15–19 years old) | Smoking Media Literacy Scale [32]. Cross-cultural adaptation. | 1-factor scale with 18 items | 1-factor scale | The 4-point Likert-type scale (strongly disagree, disagree, agree, strongly agree). The scale is 10 points by dividing the raw score of 54 points by 5.4. | Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.75 |
Page et al. [37] | Media literacy and cigarette smoking in Hungarian adolescents | Hungarian | 546 students (13–18 years old) | Smoking media literacy [32] cross-cultural adaptation | 1-factor scale with 18 items | 1-factor scale | The 4-point Likert-type scale (strongly disagree, disagree, agree, strongly agree). The scale is 10 points, dividing the raw score of 54 points by 5.4. | Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.78 |
Levin-Zamir et al. [12] | Media Health Literacy (MHL) | English | Jewish adolescents | Own elaboration | 4 dimensions, 6 item | 1. Content Identification 2. Perceived influence on behavior 3. Critical analysis 4. Intended action/reaction | Items were measured on a 5-point Likert scale from 0 (no identification) to 4 (action/interaction mentioned). The final score was composed of the sum of the item results (0–24 points). | Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.74 Reliability: the coefficient of reproducibility was 0.84 Scalability: -coefficients of scalability ranged from 0.54 to 0.80 |
Chen, et al. [33] | Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Media Literacy scale (SSB-ML). | English | Adultos (>18 años) consuming > 200 SSB kcal/day | Smoking Media Literacy Scale [32] | 3 dimensions, 18 items | 1. Authors and Audiences 2. Messages and Meanings 3. Representation and Reality | The 7-point Likert-type scale ranging from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (7). | Content validity: -Two rounds of revision Internal consistency: -Cronbach α = 0.89 |
Demir, et al. [37]. | Turkish Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Media Literacy scale (Turkish SSB-ML). | Turkish | Adults (university students) | Sugar-Sweetenes Beverages Media Literacy scale (SSB-ML); Chen et al. [33] Cross-cultural adaptation | 3 sub-dimensions y 19 items | 1. Authors and Audiences 2. Messages and Meanings 3. Representation and Reality | The 7-point Likert-type scale. Each item is scored as “1 = absolutely disagree” “4 = neutral”, and”7 = strongly agree”. | Content validity: -CVI 2 = 0.96 Construct validity: -KMO 3 = 0.834 -RMSEA 4 was <0.08 CFI 5 = 0.94 TLI 6 = 0.9 4 Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.86. Reliability: -Spearman–Brown coefficient = 0.73 |
Kim et al. [38] | Korean Version of the Smoking Media Literacy Scale for Adolescents (K-SMLS). | Korean | Adolescents | Smoking Media Literacy Scale [32] Cross-cultural adaptation | 3 dimensions, 15 items | 1. Authors and audiences 2. Messages and meanings 3. Representation and reality | 4-point Likert-type scale (0 = strongly disagree, 1 = disagree, 2 = agree, and 3 = strongly agree). Total raw scores range from 0 to 54. The total scores were converted to a 10-point scale by dividing the raw score for the 54-point scale by 5.4. | Content validity: -CVI = 0.78 Construct validity: -KMO = 0.79 -CFI = 0.93 -TLI = 0.92 -RMSEA = 0.09 -SRMR 7 = 0.09 Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.78 -McDonald’s Omega = 0.78 |
Long and Yoon [39]. | Chinese Sugar-Sweetenes Beverages Media Literacy scale (C-SSB-ML). | Chinese | Adults (university students) | Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Media Literacy scale (SSB-ML) Chen et al. [33]. Cross-cultural adaptation | 3 sub-dimensions, 19 items | 1. Authors and Audiences 2. Messages and Meanings 3. Representation and Reality | The 7-point Likert-type scale. Each item is scored as “1 = absolutely disagree” “4 = neutral”, and ”7 = strongly agree”. | Content validity: -CVI = 0.88. Construct validity: -KMO = 0.93 -CFI = 0.92 -TLI = 0.91 -RMSEA < 0.08 -SRMR < 0.07 Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.92 Reliability: -Spearman–Brown coefficient = 0.83 Criterion validity: -Correlation between C-SSB-ML y eHEALS (p < 0.001) |
Fleary [34] | Adolescent Media Health Literacy scales (Adolescent MHL). | English | American adolescents | MHL [12]. | 3 dimensions, 21 items | 1. Recognition/identification (9 items) 2. Influence/critical analysis (9 items) 3. Action/reaction (3 items) | The items are 21 images about health. -Recognition/identification (9 items): the following question is associated with each picture: “Is there a health-related message in the picture?”. Dichotomous answer: Yes/No -Influence/critical analysis (9 items): 4 response options (score 0–4). -Action/reaction (3 items): 5 response options (scored from 0–3). | Internal consistency: -KR-20 α 8 = 0.74 Criterion validity: -Correlation with NVS 9 scale (r = 0.3, p > 0.01) y eHEALS 10 (r = 0.22, p < 0.001). |
Nazarnia, et al. [41] | Media Health Literacy (MeHLit) | English | Adults | Own elaboration based on a literature review combining keywords of media literacy and health. | 5 dimensions, 21 item | 1. Goal appraisal skill 2. Content appraisal skill 3. Implicit meaning appraisal skill 4. Visual comprehension skill 5. Audience appraisal skill | The 5-point Likert scale ranging from never (0), rarely (1), sometimes (2), most of the time (3), and always (4). The scoring ranges from 0 to 84 (the higher score means that a person understands more messages related to health issues). | Content validity: -CVI = 0.93 Construct validity: -KMO index was 0.896 -RMSEA = 0.051 -IFI = 0.92 -CFI = 0.93 Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.91 |
Li, et al. [40] | The Chinese version of Media Health Literacy (MeHLit) | Chinese | Adults | MeHLit de Nazarnia Zarei et al. [36]. Cross-cultural adaptation | 5 dimensions, 21 item | 1. Goal appraisal skill 2. Content appraisal skill 3. Implicit meaning appraisal skill 4. Visual comprehension skill 5. Audience appraisal skill | The 5-point Likert scale ranging from never (0), rarely (1), sometimes (2), most of the time (3), and always (4). The scoring ranges from 0 to 84 (the higher score means that a person understands more messages related to health issues). | Content validity: -CVI = 0.85 Construct validity: -KMO = 0.77 -RAMSEA = 0.03 -SRMR < 0.07 -CFI = 0.98 -TLI = 0.97 -AVE 11 = 0.72 Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.85 -McDonald’s omega = 0.83 Reliability: -Split-half = 0.9 -Test–retest = 0.9 |
Jormand, et al. [42]. | COVID-19 Media Literacy scale (C-19ML) | English | Adults (students from a medical university) | Own elaboration based on the guide Media Literacy Training Center of the American CML [43]. | 5 dimensions, 21 items | 1. Constructedness of credible COVID-19 media messages 2. Contractedness of fake media coronavirus messages 3. Audience 4. Format 5. Represented lifestyles in fake media coronavirus messages | The 5-point Likert scale ranging from completely disagree (1) to completely agree (5). The scoring ranges for each dimension were 4–20, 6–30, 7–35, 8–40, and 8–40. The higher scores indicated a higher C-19ML. | Content validity: -CVI = 0.94 Construct validity: -KMO = 0.86 -RAMSEA=0.093 -CFI = 0.89 -ICC 12 = 0.89 -AVE > 0.70 Internal consistency: -Cronbach’s α = 0.86 |
3.3. Psychometric Properties of the Instruments
3.3.1. Internal Consistency
3.3.2. Reliability
3.3.3. Content Validity
3.3.4. Structural Validity
3.3.5. Hypothesis Testing for Construct Validity
3.3.6. Cross-Cultural Validity
3.3.7. Criterion Validity
3.3.8. Evaluation of Evidence
3.4. Synthesis of Quality of the Evidence Obtained
Instrument | Article | Structural Validity | Internal Consistency | Reliability | Measurement Error | Hypothesis Testing for Construct Validity | Cross-Cultural Validity/Measurement Invariance | Criterion Validity | Responsiveness | % Strong to Moderate Evidence |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SML | Primack et al. [32] | U 1 | S 2 | U | U | S | U | U | U | 25% |
SML in Vietnamese Adolescents | Page et al. [35] | U | S | U | U | S | C 3 | U | U | 25% |
SML in Hungarian Adolescents | Page et al. [36]. | U | S | U | U | S | C | U | U | 25% |
MHL | Levin-Zamir, et al. [12] | U | S | S | U | U | U | M 5 | U | 37.5% |
SSB-ML | Chen et al. [33] | U | S | U | U | U | U | U | U | 12.5% |
Turkish SSB-ML | Demir et al. [37] | S | S | S | U | U | S | U | U | 50% |
K-SMLS | Kim et al. [38] | S | S | U | U | U | L 4 | U | U | 25% |
C-SSB-ML | Long and Yoon [39] | S | S | S | U | U | S | S | U | 62.5% |
Adolescent MHL | Fleary [34] | U | S | U | U | S | L | S | U | 37.5% |
MeHLit | Nazarnia et al. [41] | S | S | M | U | S | U | U | U | 50% |
Chinese-MeHLit | Li et al. [40] | S | S | S | U | S | S | U | U | 62.5% |
C-19ML | Jormand et al. [42] | S | S | U | U | U | U | U | U | 25% |
Evidence | % strong–moderate | 50% | 100% | 41.6% | 0% | 50% | 25% | 25% | 0% | |
% limited conflicting | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 33.3% | 0% | 0% | ||
% unknown | 50% | 0% | 58.4% | 100% | 50% | 41.7% | 75% | 100% |
4. Discussion
5. Implications for Nursing Practice
6. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Public Involvement Statement
Guidelines and Standards Statement
Use of Artificial Intelligence
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Summary Table of the Studies Included in the Review
Author (Year) | Title | Country | Design Sample | Objective | Results | Conclusions | Evaluation of the Study Report |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primack et al. (2006) [32] | Development and Validation of a Smoking Media Literacy Scale for Adolescents | USA | -Cross-sectional study -1690 students aged 14 to 18 years at a large Pittsburgh, PA, public high school | To develop a media literacy scale for smokers (SML) and to evaluate the reliability and criterion validity of the scale. | -Cronbach’s alpha = 0.78 -SML showed significant associations with current smoking (p = 0.01), but not norms (p = 0.42). | Measurement of media literacy on smoking demonstrates excellent reliability and concurrent criterion validity. Given the independent link between media literacy and smoking, this could be a promising tool for future tobacco control interventions. | STROBE: 18/22 |
Chen, et al. (2017) [33] | Development and Evaluation of the Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Media Literacy (SSB-ML) scale and Its Relationship With SSB Consumption | USA 1 | -Cross-sectional study -293 adults in rural southwestern Virginia | Create a SSB-specific media literacy scale. Describe the psychometric properties of the scale. | SSB-ML showed acceptable-to-strong levels of internal consistency scores (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.89). | SSB-ML describes media skills across an adult population and it is an appropriate tool to predict consumption patterns. | STROBE 2: 19/22 |
Fleary (2022) [34] | Development and validation of the Adolescent Media Health Literacy scales: Rasch Measurement Model Approach | New York, USA | Cross-sectional study; 355 adolescents included in the research | Develop and validate test-based scales of adolescents’ MHL. | -α del KR-20 = 0.91 | The action/reaction dimension did not show good convergent and criterion validity; therefore, this scale should not be used until further research on its psychometric properties is conducted. | STROBE: 18/22 |
Page et al. (2011) [35] | Smoking Media Literacy in Vietnamese Adolescents | Vietnam | -Cross-sectional study -2000 students (grades 10–12) of two high schools | To evaluate social media literacy (SML) among Vietnamese adolescents and explore its correlation with smoking behavior and susceptibility to future smoking. | -Cronbach’s alpha = 0.87 -While SML was linked to reduced smoking overall, no association was found with susceptibility to future smoking. | The correlation between smoking media literacy (SML) and decreased smoking highlights the necessity for additional research on SML, in other adolescent populations. | STROBE: 19 |
Page, et al. (2011) [36] | Media literacy and cigarette smoking in Hungarian adolescents | Hungary | -Cross-sectional study -546 students in grades 8 and 12 | To evaluate smoking media literacy among Hungarian youth and ascertain its relationship with both current smoking behavior and susceptibility to future smoking. | -Cronbach’s alpha = 0.75 -While smoking media literacy was linked to reduced current smoking rates similarly to American adolescents, it did not correlate with susceptibility to future smoking. | Hungarian adolescents demonstrated lower smoking media literacy than their American counterparts. While smoking media literacy was associated with decreased current smoking rates similar to American adolescents, it did not correlate with susceptibility to future smoking. | STROBE: 19 |
Levin-Zamir et al. (2011) [12] | Media Health Literacy (MHL): development and measurement of the concept among adolescents | Israel | -Cross-sectional study. -1316 Israeli adolescents from public schools | Developed new scale: Media Health Literacy (MHL) | This new measure (MHL) had an internal reability and consistency with a Cronbach’s alpha = 0.74. | This study confirmed the usefulness of this new scale for measuring media health literacy (MHL). | STROBE: 20/22 |
Demir et al. (2019) [37] | Psychometric properties of the Turkish version of the Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Media Literacy scale for university students | Turkey | Methodological descriptive correlational study. -884 university students | To translate and adapt the Sugar-Sweetened Beverages Media Literacy scale to the Turkish language. | -Cronbach’s alpha was 0.86. | The Turkish version was a suitable measurement tool for the Turkish sample. | STROBE: 20/22 |
Kim et al. (2021) [38] | Psychometric Properties of the Korean Version of the Smoking Media Literacy Scale for Adolescents. | Korea | -Cross-sectional study -215 total adolescents from five high schools in the capital city of Korea | To cross-culturally modify the Smoking Media Literacy Scale and evaluate the validity and reliability of the Korean version of the revised Smoking Media Literacy Scale for Adolescents (K-SMLS). | -Cronbach’s alpha = 0.79 | This study confirmed that the K-SMLS is a valid and reliable instrument to assess SML among Korean adolescents. | STROBE 21/22 |
Long & Yoon (2022) [39] | Psychometric properties of the Chinese version of the sugar-sweetened beverages media literacy scale for undergraduate | China | Cross-sectional study. -1044 students from two universities in China | -Translate and adapt from English to Chinese the C-SSB-ML scale. -Describe the psychometric properties of the revised Chinese version of the SSB-ML (C-SSB-ML) and evaluate its validity and reliability. | -Cronbach’s alpha of C-SSB-ML scale was 0.92. -The three-factor model was adequate. | The C-SSB-ML is a valid and reliable instrument. It is also an appropriate tool to use in studies with young people because it is feasible and teachable. | STROBE: 20/22 |
Li et al. (2023) [40] | Psychometric evaluation of the Chinese version of the media Health Literacy Questionnaire: A validation study | China | Cross-sectional study. -514 adults | Translate the Media Health Literacy (MeHLit) questionnaire into Chinese and assess its psychometric properties. | -Cronbach’s alpha was 0.85. -Validation factor analysis, content validity, and reliability were appropriate. | The Chinese-MeHLit scale has adequate psychometric properties among the Chinese public, so it can be used to evaluate media health literacy. | STROBE: 20/22 |
Nazarnia et al. (2022) [41] | Development and psychometric properties of a tool to assess Media Health Literacy (MeHLit) | Irán | Cross-sectional study; 213 adults admitted to the research | Design a new psychometric instrument to assess Media Health Literacy: MeHLit. | -The MeHLit questionnaire was the first tool to assess media health literacy in adults. -MeHLit was a valid and reliable tool to measure media health literacy regarding individuals’ skills to assess health-related messages. -Cronbach’s alpha was 0.91. | -MeHlit was a validate and reliable questionnaire to assess media health literacy. | STROBE: 20/22 |
Jormand et al. (2023) [42] | Developing and validation of COVID-19 media literacy scale among students during the COVID-19 pandemic | Iran | Cross-sectional study. -530 students from a medical university | Assess C-19ML’s psychometric features | Cronbach’s alpha was 0.86. For content validity, construct validity, reliability, and external validity, the results obtained were optimal. | C-19ML is a reliable and valid tool for measuring the level of COVID-19 media literacy. | STROBE: 20/22 |
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Database | Search String | Documents Retrieved | Documents Selected |
---|---|---|---|
Pubmed | (media literacy AND health) AND (scale OR questionnaire OR instrument OR tool OR test) | 220 | 6 |
media literacy AND (scale OR tool OR questionnaire) | 7 | ||
(media literacy AND health) AND (scale OR tool OR questionnaire) | 20 | ||
(communications media) AND (information literacy) AND (health) | 78 | ||
WOS 1 | (media literacy AND health) AND (scale OR questionnaire OR instrument OR tool OR test) | 193 | 5 |
(media literacy AND health literacy) AND (tool OR questionnaire) | 42 | ||
(media literacy) AND ((health)AND ((tool) OR (questionnaire) OR (scale))) | 63 | ||
Dialnet | Alfabetización mediática AND (escala OR cuestionario OR instrumento) | 91 | 0 |
Alfabetización mediática AND (escala OR cuestionario OR instrumento) AND salud | 5 | ||
Scopus | media AND literacy AND health AND (scale OR instrument OR questionnaire) | 167 | 1 |
Author (Year) | PROM Design | PROM Relevance and Comprehensiveness | Pilot Test Desing | Comprehensibility of the Pilot test | Comprehensiveness of the Pilot Test | Final Assessment (the lowest) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Primarck et al. (2006) [32] | A 2 | A | D | D | - | Doubtful |
Page, Huong, Chi and Tien (2011) [35] | A | A | D | - | - | Doubtful |
Page, Piko, Balazs and Struk (2011) [36] | A | A | D | - | - | Doubtful |
Levin Zamir et al. (2011) [12] | V 1 | V | A | D | - | Doubtful |
Chen et al., (2017) [33] | A | A | I 4 | - | - | Inadequate |
Demir et al. (2019) [37] | A | D | - 5 | - | - | Doubtful |
Kim et al. (2021) [38] | V | D | V | A | D | Doubtful |
Long and Yoon (2022) [39] | V | A | V | D | D | Doubtful |
Fleary (2022) [34] | D 3 | D | A | D | D | Doubtful |
Nazarnia et al. (2022) [41] | V | A | V | A | A | Adequate |
Li et al. (2023) [40] | V | V | V | V | A | Adequate |
Jormand et al. (2023) [42] | V | A | I | - | - | Inadequate |
Instrument | Article | Structural Validity | Internal Consistency | Reliability | Measurement Error | Hypothesis Testing | Cross-Cultural Validity | Criterion Validity | Responsiveness |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SML 1 | Primack et al. [32] | ? | + | ? | ? | + | ? | ? | ? |
SML in Vietnamese Adolescents | Page et al. [35] | ? | + | ? | ? | + | - | ? | ? |
SML in Hungarian Adolescents | Page et al. [36]. | ? | + | ? | ? | + | - | ? | ? |
MHL 2 | Levin-Zamir, et al. [12] | ? | + | + | ? | ? | ? | + | ? |
SSB-ML 3 | Chen et al. [33] | ? | + | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
Turkish SSB-ML | Demir et al. [37] | + | + | + | ? | ? | + | ? | ? |
K-SMLS | Kim et al. [38] | + | + | ? | ? | ? | - | ? | ? |
C-SSB-ML | Long and Yoon [39] | + | + | + | ? | ? | + | + | ? |
Adolescent MHL | Fleary [34] | ? | + | ? | ? | + | ? | + | ? |
MeHLit 4 | Nazarnia et al. [41] | + | + | ? | ? | + | ? | ? | ? |
Chinese-MeHLit | Li et al. [40] | + | + | + | ? | + | + | ? | ? |
C-19ML 5 | Jormand et al. [42] | + | + | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? | ? |
Summary | Sufficient 6 | 50% | 100% | 33.3% | 0% | 50% | 25% | 25% | 0% |
Insufficient 7 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 25% | 0% | 0% | |
Indeterminate 8 | 50% | 0% | 66.7% | 100% | 50% | 50% | 75% | 100% |
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Navas-Echazarreta, N.; Juárez-Vela, R.; Martínez-Sabater, A.; Echániz-Serrano, E.; Fernández-Rodrigo, M.T.; Navarro-Martínez, O.; Sancho-Sánchez, C.; Cobos-Rincón, A.; Rodríguez-Calvo, A.; González-Fernández, S.; et al. Measuring Instruments for Media Health Literacy: A Systematic Review of Psychometric Properties. Nurs. Rep. 2024, 14, 2795-2818. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14040206
Navas-Echazarreta N, Juárez-Vela R, Martínez-Sabater A, Echániz-Serrano E, Fernández-Rodrigo MT, Navarro-Martínez O, Sancho-Sánchez C, Cobos-Rincón A, Rodríguez-Calvo A, González-Fernández S, et al. Measuring Instruments for Media Health Literacy: A Systematic Review of Psychometric Properties. Nursing Reports. 2024; 14(4):2795-2818. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14040206
Chicago/Turabian StyleNavas-Echazarreta, Noelia, Raúl Juárez-Vela, Antonio Martínez-Sabater, Emmanuel Echániz-Serrano, María Teresa Fernández-Rodrigo, Olga Navarro-Martínez, Consuelo Sancho-Sánchez, Ana Cobos-Rincón, Antonio Rodríguez-Calvo, Silvia González-Fernández, and et al. 2024. "Measuring Instruments for Media Health Literacy: A Systematic Review of Psychometric Properties" Nursing Reports 14, no. 4: 2795-2818. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14040206
APA StyleNavas-Echazarreta, N., Juárez-Vela, R., Martínez-Sabater, A., Echániz-Serrano, E., Fernández-Rodrigo, M. T., Navarro-Martínez, O., Sancho-Sánchez, C., Cobos-Rincón, A., Rodríguez-Calvo, A., González-Fernández, S., Chover-Sierra, E., & Satústegui-Dordá, P. J. (2024). Measuring Instruments for Media Health Literacy: A Systematic Review of Psychometric Properties. Nursing Reports, 14(4), 2795-2818. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep14040206