Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec

Background Globally, food insecurity is a major public health concern. In North America, it is particularly prevalent in certain sub-groups, including Indigenous communities. Although many Indigenous and remote communities harvest and share food, most food security assessment tools focus on economic...

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Published in:PLOS ONE
Main Authors: Teh, Lisa, Pirkle, Catherine, Furgal, Chris, Fillion, Myriam, Lucas, Michel
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2017
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Online Access:https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/
https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/1/journal.pone.0178708.pdf
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0178708
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spelling ftuniquebecteluq:oai:r-libre.teluq.ca:1263 2023-05-15T15:13:37+02:00 Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec Teh, Lisa Pirkle, Catherine Furgal, Chris Fillion, Myriam Lucas, Michel 2017 pdf https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/ https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/1/journal.pone.0178708.pdf http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0178708 en eng https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/1/journal.pone.0178708.pdf Teh, Lisa; Pirkle, Catherine; Furgal, Chris; Fillion, Myriam et Lucas, Michel (2017). Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec. PLoS ONE, 12 (6), e0178708. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178708 <https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178708> Articles de revues PeerReviewed 2017 ftuniquebecteluq https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178708 2022-01-17T11:51:44Z Background Globally, food insecurity is a major public health concern. In North America, it is particularly prevalent in certain sub-groups, including Indigenous communities. Although many Indigenous and remote communities harvest and share food, most food security assessment tools focus on economic access. This study describes the psychometric evaluation of a modified Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS), developed for mixed economies, to assess food insecurity among pregnant Inuit women. Methods The HFIAS was administered to 130 pregnant women in Nunavik (Arctic region of Quebec), Canada. Data were fit to a Rasch Rating Scale Model (RSM) to determine the discrimination ability of the HFIAS. Person parameter (Theta) estimates were calculated based on the RSM to provide a more accurate scoring system of the modified HFIAS for this population. Theta values were compared to known correlates of food insecurity. Results Comparative fit indices showed preference for a modified version of the HFIAS over the original. Theta values displayed a continuum of severity estimates and those values indicating greater food insecurity were consistently linked to known correlates of food insecurity. Participants living in households with more than 1 hunter (Theta = -.45) or more than 1 fisher (Theta = -.43) experienced less food insecurity than those with no hunters (Theta = .48) or fishers (Theta = .49) in their household. The RSM indicated the scale showed good discriminatory ability. Subsequent analyses indicated that most scale items pertain to the classification of a household as moderately food insecure. Conclusions The modified HFIAS shows potential for measuring food insecurity among pregnant women in Nunavik. This is an efficient instrument that can inform interventions targeting health conditions impacting groups that obtain food through both monetary and non-monetary means. Text Arctic inuit Nunavik TÉLUQ (Université du Québec): R-libre Arctic Canada Nunavik PLOS ONE 12 6 e0178708
institution Open Polar
collection TÉLUQ (Université du Québec): R-libre
op_collection_id ftuniquebecteluq
language English
description Background Globally, food insecurity is a major public health concern. In North America, it is particularly prevalent in certain sub-groups, including Indigenous communities. Although many Indigenous and remote communities harvest and share food, most food security assessment tools focus on economic access. This study describes the psychometric evaluation of a modified Household Food Insecurity Access Scale (HFIAS), developed for mixed economies, to assess food insecurity among pregnant Inuit women. Methods The HFIAS was administered to 130 pregnant women in Nunavik (Arctic region of Quebec), Canada. Data were fit to a Rasch Rating Scale Model (RSM) to determine the discrimination ability of the HFIAS. Person parameter (Theta) estimates were calculated based on the RSM to provide a more accurate scoring system of the modified HFIAS for this population. Theta values were compared to known correlates of food insecurity. Results Comparative fit indices showed preference for a modified version of the HFIAS over the original. Theta values displayed a continuum of severity estimates and those values indicating greater food insecurity were consistently linked to known correlates of food insecurity. Participants living in households with more than 1 hunter (Theta = -.45) or more than 1 fisher (Theta = -.43) experienced less food insecurity than those with no hunters (Theta = .48) or fishers (Theta = .49) in their household. The RSM indicated the scale showed good discriminatory ability. Subsequent analyses indicated that most scale items pertain to the classification of a household as moderately food insecure. Conclusions The modified HFIAS shows potential for measuring food insecurity among pregnant women in Nunavik. This is an efficient instrument that can inform interventions targeting health conditions impacting groups that obtain food through both monetary and non-monetary means.
format Text
author Teh, Lisa
Pirkle, Catherine
Furgal, Chris
Fillion, Myriam
Lucas, Michel
spellingShingle Teh, Lisa
Pirkle, Catherine
Furgal, Chris
Fillion, Myriam
Lucas, Michel
Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec
author_facet Teh, Lisa
Pirkle, Catherine
Furgal, Chris
Fillion, Myriam
Lucas, Michel
author_sort Teh, Lisa
title Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec
title_short Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec
title_full Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec
title_fullStr Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec
title_full_unstemmed Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec
title_sort psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among inuit pregnant women from northern quebec
publishDate 2017
url https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/
https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/1/journal.pone.0178708.pdf
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0178708
geographic Arctic
Canada
Nunavik
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
Nunavik
genre Arctic
inuit
Nunavik
genre_facet Arctic
inuit
Nunavik
op_relation https://r-libre.teluq.ca/1263/1/journal.pone.0178708.pdf
Teh, Lisa; Pirkle, Catherine; Furgal, Chris; Fillion, Myriam et Lucas, Michel (2017). Psychometric validation of the household food insecurity access scale among Inuit pregnant women from Northern Quebec. PLoS ONE, 12 (6), e0178708. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178708 <https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0178708>
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