Diabetes knowledge tests, used in conjunction with measures of patient attitudes and behaviors, can provide a useful basis for assessing educational needs and designing appropriate instructional experiences. Accurate decisions require instruments that measure patient knowledge of diabetes and its management with high reliability and validity. Data obtained from more than 950 administrations of two parallel forms of a Diabetes Patient Knowledge Test have provided documentation of patient knowledge levels, insight into the effectiveness of educational programs, and support for ongoing program revisions. These data have also allowed study of the psychometric properties of the test instruments, including factor structure, reliability, and validity. Each test form has an overall reliability of 0.89 and the forms are of equal difficulty. Five subcomponents (factors) labeled “Carbohydrates,” “Blood Sugar,” “Basics,” “Food Exchanges,” and “Insulin Administration” are measured in the tests. Evidence of content, construct, concurrent, and discriminant validity has been demonstrated.
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Original Articles|
November 01 1983
The Validation of a Diabetes Patient Knowledge Test Free
George E Hess, M.A.;
George E Hess, M.A.
Department of Postgraduate Medicine and Health Professions Education, University of Michigan Medical School
Ann Arbor, Michigan
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Wayne K Davis, Ph.D.
Wayne K Davis, Ph.D.
Department of Postgraduate Medicine and Health Professions Education, University of Michigan Medical School
Ann Arbor, Michigan
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Address reprint requests to Wayne K. Davis, Ph.D., GIIII Towsley Center, Box 57, Office of Educational Resources and Research, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109.
Citation
George E Hess, Wayne K Davis; The Validation of a Diabetes Patient Knowledge Test. Diabetes Care 1 November 1983; 6 (6): 591–596. https://doi.org/10.2337/diacare.6.6.591
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