Development and validation of a short form of the medication literacy scale for Chinese College Students
Chen Zhenzhen (1,2), Ren Jiabao (1,2), Duan Tingyu (3), Chen Ke (4),, Hou Ruyi (5), Li Yimiao (5), Zeng Leixiao (5), Meng Xiaoxuan (6), Wu Yibo, (7), Liu Yu (2), ((1) College of Science, Minzu University of China, Beijing,, China, (2) School of Nursing, China Medical University

TL;DR
This study developed and validated a concise 6-item medication literacy scale for Chinese college students, ensuring quick, reliable assessment of their medication understanding using advanced psychometric methods.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel, brief medication literacy scale (MLS-SF) tailored for college students, validated through rigorous psychometric analysis, filling a gap in efficient health literacy measurement tools.
Findings
MLS-SF has good internal consistency (α=0.765).
The scale's three-factor structure is confirmed with satisfactory fit indices.
IRT analysis shows items are informative at medium literacy levels.
Abstract
Medication literacy is integral to health literacy, pivotal for medication safety and adherence. It denotes an individual's capacity to discern, comprehend, and convey medication-related information. Existing scales, however, are time-consuming and predominantly cater to patients and community dwellers, necessitating a more succinct instrument. This study presents the development of a brief Medication Literacy Scale (MLS-14) utilizing classical test theory (CTT) and item response theory (IRT), targeting a college student demographic. The MLS-14's abbreviated version, a 6-item scale (MLS-SF), was distilled through CTT and IRT methodologies, engaging 2431 Chinese college students to scrutinize its psychometric properties. The MLS-SF demonstrated a Cronbach's {\alpha} of 0.765, with three extracted factors via exploratory factor analysis, accounting for 66% of the cumulative variance. All…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPharmaceutical Practices and Patient Outcomes · Educational Strategies and Epistemologies · Innovations in Medical Education
