# Validation of a questionnaire for assessing household vulnerability to climate change and health among small island communities

**Authors:** Raheel Nazakat, Mohd Faiz Ibrahim, Fadly Syah Arsad, Noraishah Mohammad Sham, Nik Muhammad Nizam Nik Hassan, Nadia Mohamad, Siti Aishah Rashid, Wan Rozita Wan Mahiyuddin, Rohaida Ismail

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2025.1593880 · 2025-06-06

## TL;DR

This paper introduces a validated questionnaire to assess how climate change affects health and vulnerability in small island communities.

## Contribution

A new, validated tool for assessing household vulnerability to climate change and health in tropical small island communities.

## Key findings

- The questionnaire showed excellent content validity with S-CVI/UA of 0.89 and S-CVI/Ave of 0.98.
- 13.5% of households in Carey Island were identified as highly vulnerable to climate change impacts.
- Key vulnerability factors included exposure to drought, shoreline erosion, and limited healthcare access.

## Abstract

Small island communities in tropical regions are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. However, there is a lack of a comprehensive tool to assess their health vulnerability, particularly at the household level. This study addresses this gap by developing and validating a questionnaire to evaluate household vulnerability to climate change and health in these communities.

The questionnaire was constructed in three phases: questionnaire development, validity assessment, and pilot testing. It was developed using a comprehensive framework that incorporated three key dimensions of vulnerability: exposure, sensitivity, and adaptive capacity.

Content validity, evaluated by a panel of experts, demonstrated excellent item-level and scale-level validity indices with S-CVI/UA and S-CVI/Ave of 0.89 and 0.98, respectively. Pilot testing conducted in Carey Island identified 13.5% of households as highly vulnerable. Key contributing factors include high exposure to drought and shoreline erosion, limited access to healthcare, insufficient financial resources, lack of elevated housing structures, and inadequate community engagement and adaptive behavior.

The validated tool provides a reliable and context-specific instrument for identifying vulnerable households, enabling policymakers and practitioners to design tailored interventions. This tool provides a structured and evidence-based approach for assessing vulnerability, supporting more effective planning and resilience-building in small island communities facing climate-related health risks.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** physical (MESH:D059445), flooding (MESH:C565009), heat-related illnesses (MESH:D018882), drought (MESH:C536747), vector-borne diseases (MESH:D000079426)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Fascellina sp. A (species) [taxon 1373661]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12179156/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12179156