AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to evaluate the reliability and validity of a new pediatric diabetes knowledge assessment tool (KAT-1) for children, adolescents, young adults, and their caregivers.
  • Feedback from a pilot study with 40 participants helped refine the tool, followed by a validation study with 200 individuals to assess correlations between KAT-1 scores, diabetes knowledge, and blood sugar levels.
  • Results showed that KAT-1 scores positively correlated with existing diabetes knowledge tests and negatively with HbA1c levels, indicating strong internal consistency and the tool's effectiveness in assessing diabetes knowledge.

Article Abstract

Objective: This study sought to examine the reliability and validity of a novel pediatric type 1 diabetes knowledge assessment (KAT-1) designed for children, adolescents, young adults and their parents/guardians. The instrument was designed to be integrated into the clinic workflow to obtain objective data electronically.

Research Design And Methods: KAT-1 was developed by a multidisciplinary team and includes 11 independent topical subscales. Forty children/caregivers participated in a pilot study; their feedback was used to improve item clarity and readability. Subsequently, a validation study was performed in 200 participants (100 children/adolescents/young adults with type 1 diabetes ages 11-21 years and 100 parents/guardians of children with type 1 diabetes ages 1-15 years) to examine correlations between the KAT-1 scores and Revised Diabetes Knowledge Test (DKT2) scores and HbA1c. An item analysis was conducted to determine internal consistency and reliability; topical subscales were evaluated using Cronbach's alpha.

Results: Total KAT-1 scores were positively correlated with DKT2 scores r = 0.674, p < 0.001, and negatively correlated with HbA1c, r = -0.3, p < 0.001. All KAT-1 subscales were positively and significantly correlated with one another and with total KAT-1 score. Internal consistency of total KAT-1 score was strong (Cronbach's α = 0.938, mean score 84.6, SD = 16.1) and 9 of 11 independent topical subscales demonstrated strong internal consistency. Completion time for subscales was <5 min.

Conclusions: KAT-1 is a valid instrument to assess type 1 diabetes knowledge. The instrument's short topical subscales can be used to objectively assess specific knowledge and individualize diabetes education. KAT-1 has been integrated into our electronic health record (EPIC) and is available online at no cost.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/pedi.13414DOI Listing

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