TY - JOUR
T1 - Environmental Profile of a Community's Health (EPOCH)
T2 - An Ecometric Assessment of Measures of the Community Environment Based on Individual Perception
AU - Corsi, Daniel J.
AU - Subramanian, S. V.
AU - McKee, Martin
AU - Li, Wei
AU - Swaminathan, Sumathi
AU - Lopez-Jaramillo, Patricio
AU - Avezum, Alvaro
AU - Lear, Scott A.
AU - Dagenais, Gilles
AU - Rangarajan, Sumathy
AU - Teo, Koon
AU - Yusuf, Salim
AU - Chow, Clara K.
PY - 2012/9/4
Y1 - 2012/9/4
N2 - Background: Public health research has turned towards examining upstream, community-level determinants of cardiovascular disease risk factors. Objective measures of the environment, such as those derived from direct observation, and perception-based measures by residents have both been associated with health behaviours. However, current methods are generally limited to objective measures, often derived from administrative data, and few instruments have been evaluated for use in rural areas or in low-income countries. We evaluate the reliability of a quantitative tool designed to capture perceptions of community tobacco, nutrition, and social environments obtained from interviews with residents in communities in 5 countries. Methodology/ Principal Findings: Thirteen measures of the community environment were developed from responses to questionnaire items from 2,360 individuals residing in 84 urban and rural communities in 5 countries (China, India, Brazil, Colombia, and Canada) in the Environmental Profile of a Community's Health (EPOCH) study. Reliability and other properties of the community-level measures were assessed using multilevel models. High reliability (>0.80) was demonstrated for all community-level measures at the mean number of survey respondents per community (n = 28 respondents). Questionnaire items included in each scale were found to represent a common latent factor at the community level in multilevel factor analysis models. Conclusions/ Significance: Reliable measures which represent aspects of communities potentially related to cardiovascular disease (CVD)/risk factors can be obtained using feasible sample sizes. The EPOCH instrument is suitable for use in different settings to explore upstream determinants of CVD/risk factors.
AB - Background: Public health research has turned towards examining upstream, community-level determinants of cardiovascular disease risk factors. Objective measures of the environment, such as those derived from direct observation, and perception-based measures by residents have both been associated with health behaviours. However, current methods are generally limited to objective measures, often derived from administrative data, and few instruments have been evaluated for use in rural areas or in low-income countries. We evaluate the reliability of a quantitative tool designed to capture perceptions of community tobacco, nutrition, and social environments obtained from interviews with residents in communities in 5 countries. Methodology/ Principal Findings: Thirteen measures of the community environment were developed from responses to questionnaire items from 2,360 individuals residing in 84 urban and rural communities in 5 countries (China, India, Brazil, Colombia, and Canada) in the Environmental Profile of a Community's Health (EPOCH) study. Reliability and other properties of the community-level measures were assessed using multilevel models. High reliability (>0.80) was demonstrated for all community-level measures at the mean number of survey respondents per community (n = 28 respondents). Questionnaire items included in each scale were found to represent a common latent factor at the community level in multilevel factor analysis models. Conclusions/ Significance: Reliable measures which represent aspects of communities potentially related to cardiovascular disease (CVD)/risk factors can be obtained using feasible sample sizes. The EPOCH instrument is suitable for use in different settings to explore upstream determinants of CVD/risk factors.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84866014984&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1371/journal.pone.0044410
DO - 10.1371/journal.pone.0044410
M3 - Artículo Científico
C2 - 22973446
AN - SCOPUS:84866014984
SN - 1932-6203
VL - 7
JO - PLoS ONE
JF - PLoS ONE
IS - 9
M1 - e44410
ER -