Development and Validation of Smoking Abstinence Self-efficacy Scale among Iranian Female Adolescents

Document Type : Original Quantitative and Qualitative Research Paper

Authors

1 Msc in Community Health Nursing, Ebn-e-Sina Hospital, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran

2 Associate Professor, Nursing and Midwifery Care Research Center, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran

3 Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, Social Determinants of Health Research Center, Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran

4 Assistant Professor, Iranian Research Center on Healthy Aging, Department of Medical Surgical Nursing, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Sabzevar University of Medical Sciences, Sabzevar, Iran

Abstract

Background: Among different factors, self-efficacy is one of the most suitable components for predicting smoking behavior among adolescents. Therefore, it is essential to design a native tool to measure this high-risk behavior in adolescents and implement prevention programs in this age group.
Aim: This study aimed to design and validate a smoking abstinence self-efficacy questionnaire in female adolescents.
Method: In this methodological study, a comprehensive literature review was conducted, and the available similar questionnaires were used to prepare the items. In total, 351 female schoolchildren were selected by convenience sampling in Mashhad, Iran, between October 2017 and January 2018. Face and content validity and construct validity were applied for psychometric evaluation of the developed tool. The reliability of the tool was tested by internal consistency.
Results: The final version of the smoking abstinence self-efficacy scale in Iranian female adolescents includes 16 items after a psychometric evaluation. The content validity of the tool was obtained at 0.99. Moreover, exploratory factor analysis explored three factors of emotional, social, and high-risk situations explaining 60% of the variance. Cronbach's alpha coefficient of the questionnaire was estimated at 0.94.
Implications for Practice: The smoking abstinence self-efficacy scale is a valid and reliable tool among Iranian female adolescents derived from the native context of this group of people which can examine smoking abstinence self-efficacy in three dimensions of emotional, social, and high-risk situations. Moreover, it can identify adolescents with different levels of smoking abstinence self-efficacy.
 

Keywords


Introduction

It is widely accepted that smoking is one of the most serious threats to human health that kills around 5 million people worldwide annually (1). According to statistics, smoking accounts for 90% of lung cancers, 75% of respiratory diseases, 50% of cardiovascular diseases, 30% of deaths between the ages of 30 and 50, and 12% of all mortalities (2). Approximately, 650 million people, who smoke today, will eventually die from smoking-related diseases (2, 3). Moreover, the annual death rate caused by smoking is higher than the sum of deaths caused by drugs, AIDS, suicide, murder, and accidents (4).

If one person begins to smoke during adolescence, s/he can rarely quit this high-risk behavior in adulthood (5). Smoking is the gateway to other high-risk behaviors, such as alcohol consumption and other addictive behaviors (6). One of the most important and widespread concerns of human societies is the prevalence of high-risk behaviors, especially among adolescents and young people. Furthermore, the risky behaviors have been increasing worldwide despite the tobacco prevention activities in the past three decades (7). In this regard, families and schools play important roles since prevention is the only way to cope with this critical and social issue (8).

Other influential factors in managing smoking behavior in adolescents include policies, limited educational resources, and the cultural structure of the family (9). Numerous factors are in this age group, such as parent and friend smoking behaviors, smoking advertising, misconceptions about the harms of smoking, positive attitude toward smoking, and low self-efficacy of saying "No" to smoking. 

Self-efficacy is one of the most effective predictors to start smoking (10), and it is considered as an important aspect of self-control (11), and people with this trait believe that they will be successful in their works. Self-efficacy, the core concept of many models and theories of changing behavior, means that a person believes in his or her capabilities to perform a particular behavior for a specific outcome (12). Specific or situational self-efficacy is called persistence to perform a specific task in progress (13). Smoking abstinence self-efficacy refers to one's confidence in his ability to avoid smoking under stressful and difficult situations, which is among the early predictors in abstinence and cessation of drug and smoking (14).

Studies have shown that adolescents with low smoking abstinence self-efficacy smoke in stressful situations as well as in situations when they are with friends and peers (15). Gender, along with self-efficacy, has been mentioned to be effective in starting and quitting smoking (16, 17). Female adolescents are less likely to smoke, and they consider smoking to be more harmful to health, compared to male adolescents. In addition, they have more smoking abstinence self-efficacy than males; however, this self-efficacy compared to boys is decreased substantially considering the influence of smoker peers (18).

Despite the importance of smoking abstinence self-efficacy and differences between males and females in this regard, there has been no study investigating the tools that could specifically measure the construct of "smoking abstinence self-efficacy in Iranian female adolescents". In internal and external databases, Karimi et al. (2014) and Ebrahimi et al. (2014) utilized self-efficacy and tobacco rejection skills questionnaires (19, 20). The questionnaire that was employed by Karimi et al. investigated the self-efficacy and predictive behaviors of tobacco use as well as other dimensions, such as knowledge, self-esteem, and attitude of adolescents (19). Furthermore, Ebrahimi et al. developed a questionnaire for male students who used cigarettes; however, this may not be a good scale for evaluating "smoking abstinence self-efficacy" since it has been made for males, and they have suggested attention to gender in future studies (20).

Another tool is the smoking abstinence self-efficacy questionnaire in adolescents with confirmed reliability and validity by Lawrence (1989) (21). This questionnaire has not been cross-culturally adapted in Iran since the items evaluating accepting or rejecting cigarettes in situations, such as skiing and participating in the parties, are not common in Iranian contexts. The drug avoidance self-efficacy questionnaire by Martin et al. has been generally made for drug consumption in 16- to 30-year-old people with multiple drug abuse (22), which is different from the target group of the present study. Therefore, it is necessary to design a questionnaire compatible with the cultural and social characteristics of Iran. Accordingly, this study aimed to design and validate a smoking abstinence self-efficacy questionnaire in Iranian female adolescents.

 

Methods

This methodological study was conducted to design and validate a smoking abstinence self-efficacy questionnaire among Iranian female adolescents. A comprehensive review of available resources was performed in order to use the items measuring smoking abstinence self-efficacy in adolescents. For this purpose, the databases, such as PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Science Direct, SID, Magiran, Iran Medex, and Google Scholar were searched using the keywords, such as "smoking", "tobacco", "cigarette", "refusal", "Abstinence", "preventive", "self-efficacy", "questionnaire", "tool", "scale", "inventory", "instrument", and "adolescent" as well as their Persian equivalents. Initially, the titles, and subsequently, the abstracts and full texts of the related studies were reviewed in this study, and the authors did not find any tools to examine specifically the smoking abstinence self-efficacy in female adolescents in Iran. Therefore, a novel tool was developed using review of the literature and the items from drug avoidance self-efficacy questionnaire by Martin et al. (22), the researcher-made smoking abstinence self-efficacy scale by Ebrahim et al. (20), the researcher-made self-efficacy and tobacco avoidance skills questionnaire by Karimy (19), and the standard smoking abstinence self-efficacy questionnaire by Lawrance (21).

An operational definition of the "smoking abstinence self-efficacy in adolescents" construct was presented based on the literature review. Items of similar tools and items based on the literature review were placed in the item pool. In the first stage, 81 items were included in the pool, and they were examined by the research team in several stages, and the duplicate, unrelated, and inappropriate items were deleted or modified. The majority of the items in the same tools had a high semantic overlapping; therefore, they were deleted or merged. Eventually, 30 items entered the psychometric properties quantitative evaluation of the tool.

To investigate the face validity of the questionnaire, 20 high school female students of 10th grade were asked to express their comments on the importance of each question in measuring the construct of "smoking abstinence self-efficacy in female adolescents". The items were scored based on a 5-point Likert scale from quite important (5), to somewhat important (4), moderately important (3), slightly important (2), and not at all important (1).

Following that, the point of the effect of each item was calculated based on the impact formula of the items, and therefore, the items which were equal to 1.5 or higher were considered appropriate. The simplicity, comprehensibility, and appropriateness of the items for measuring smoking abstinence self-efficacy in adolescents were questioned qualitatively. Moreover, content validity was investigated by qualitative and quantitative methods. In the next stage, a primary version of the questionnaire was given to seven faculty members of the Nursing and Midwifery Faculty at Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran, who had a doctoral degree in nursing. They were asked to comment on the simplicity, clarity of using appropriate words, grammar, and place of the items in the tool. Content validity ratio (CVR), content validity index (CVI), and adjusted kappa coefficient (k*) were used to evaluate the quantitative content validity. The items with CVR less than the acceptable value (0.99) were excluded from the study (23). The appropriate CVI value for each item (I-CVI) was considered more than 0.78. Additionally, the adjusted kappa statistics above 0.74, and between 0.60 and 0.74 were considered excellent and good, respectively. The mean scores of the content validity index of all remaining items were calculated as the content validity index of the scale (S-CVI/Ave) (24).

The five-step guide of Williams et al. (2010) was used for exploratory factor analysis to investigate the construct validity (25). These steps include investigating the appropriateness of the data for factor analysis, specifying the analysis method for the initial extraction of factors, selecting criteria for extracting factors, selecting the rotation method, and interpreting and naming the factors.Samplingadequacy was investigated using the Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin(KMO) index and items factor capability with Bartlett's test of sphericity (26, 27). The sample size at this stage was estimated at 300 people per item according to the ratio of 10 participants (28, 29).

Since there was a probability of not responding to the questionnaire, and the response rate was less than 100% in survey studies, the questionnaire was given to 375 people (considering response rate=75%); Finally 351 participants completed the questionnaire. According to the recommendations by Thompson and Daniel (1996), several appropriate methods were used for the extraction of factors. Kaiser Criterion, scree plot, and cumulative variance percentage methods explained by extracted factors were used in this study. The equity of more than one, placement of the factors outside the horizontal line formed from screes (factors above the point where the slope of the line changes severely), and explanation of at least 50% of the variance of the concept were judged by the extracted factors (27, 30).

In this study, univariate normality of the data was examined using skewness and kurtosis. The Promax rotation was employed due to the utilization of the maximum likelihood extraction method and the high correlation among the extracted factors (i.e., >0.3) (31). A cut-off point of 0.5 was considered for the factor loading, as well as the items that had cross loading and a factor loading less than 0.5 were eliminated from this study (32). The reliability of the tool was investigated by the internal consistency method, and Cronbach's alpha coefficient method was used to investigate the internal consistency of the extracted tools and factors (33).

 

Results

In total, 16-year-old female students of 10th-grade high school (n=351) completed the smoking abstinence self-efficacy scale. Out of 30 items that were presented to a group of experts and female students to assess the face and content validity, 6 items were removed due to the presence of lower scores than the acceptable values ​​in terms of CVR, I-CVI, and adjusted kappa coefficient. Therefore, the remaining 24 items entered the construct validity phase. The CVR and I-CVI ranges of the items were from 0.86 to 1, and 0.68 to 1, respectively. The scale content validity (S-CVI) was estimated at 0.99. Moreover, the amount of KMO in this study was determined at 0.901 indicating the adequacy of sampling. The result of Bartlett's test of sphericity in this study was significant (P<0.000) showing the suitability for factor analysis. Regarding the normal distribution of data, skewness values ​​between +2 and -2 and kurtosis between +7 and -7 showed that the data were normally distributed (34). According to the recommendations by Thompson and Daniel (1996) regarding a simultaneous utilization of a multi-method approach, three factors that had eigenvalues more than one were placed in the scree plot out of the horizontal line formed from the screes (Figure 1), and 60% of the construct variance was totally extracted.

After the psychometric evaluation of the tool, the final version of the smoking abstinence self-efficacy questionnaire was developed with 16 items (Table 1). In total, eight items were eliminated due to the load factor less than 0.5 or cross-loading on more than one factor. The results obtained from the investigation of the internal consistency of the whole scale and its factors showed good internal consistency. Moreover, the internal consistency of the questionnaire was estimated at 0.94 using Cronbach's alpha method. In addition, the Cronbach's alpha coefficients were 0.90, 0.92, and 0.88 for dimensions of high-risk, social, and emotional situations, respectively.

 

Table 1. Factor loadings of items after Promax rotation and factor naming

Question No.

I smoke…..

Social situations

High-risk situations

Emotional situations

1

When I am full of energy.

   

0.890

2

When I want to hide my feelings.

   

0.856

3

When I want to overcome my grief.

   

0.790

4

When I feel that I have no important work to do in my life.

 

0.945

 

5

When I feel that I have no valuable life.

 

0.802

 

6

When I am unemployed and have no goal in life.

 

0.778

 

7

When one of my loved ones dies.

 

0.622

 

8

When I suffer from frustration and failure.

 

0.566

 

9

When I want a reputation.

0.751

   

10

When I am sleepy and sleepless.

0.860

   

11

When there are an appropriate place and situation (A quiet place, ceremonies, and private parties with friends and peers)

0.550

   

12

When I need concentration.

0.850

   

13

When I am tempted to smoke.

0.825

   

14

When I see that some famous people smoke (actors, athletes, etc.)

0.802

   

15

When I see that my family members smoke.

0.772

   

16

When I see that some of my friends smoke.

0.592

   

 

 

 

Figure 1. Scree plot for the EFA

 

 

Discussion

Since there have been no tools measuring smoking abstinence self-efficacy in female adolescents in Iran, this study attempted to design a tool for the first time to measure smoking abstinence self-efficacy in Iranian female adolescents. Quantitative and qualitative face and content validity, and construct validity (exploratory factor analysis) were used to investigate the validity of the tool. Moreover, the reliability of the tool was evaluated using the internal consistency method (Cronbach's alpha). The results of this study confirmed the validity and reliability of the smoking abstinence self-efficacy tool in Iranian adolescents. Given that the S-CVI greater than 0.9 is acceptable, the S-CVI of the tool was obtained at 0.99. Therefore, the tool obtained good validity.

Furthermore, the internal consistency of the tool was estimated at 0.94 using Cronbach's alpha coefficient. Since values ​​above 0.7 are acceptable for a new tool, the appropriate reliability of the tool was confirmed in this study. The developed questionnaire in this study investigates smoking abstinence self-efficacy in three dimensions of emotional situations (3 items), social situations (5 items), and high-risk situations (8 items). The items were scored using a 5-point Likert scale from very likely (1), likely (2), moderately likely (3), somewhat likely (4), to not likely at all (5). Higher scores indicate more smoking abstinence self-efficacy.

The first dimension (i.e., emotional situations) measures how much one can have smoking abstinence self-efficacy when s/he is placed in emotional situations, such as high energy, frustration, and guilt. Moreover, the second dimension (i.e., high-risk situations) evaluates how much one can have smoking abstinence self-efficacy when s/he is placed in high-risk situations, such as being aimless and unemployed and faced with the death of loved ones. The last dimension (i.e., social situations) assesses how much one can have smoking abstinence self-efficacy if s/he is placed in social situations, such as attending group ceremonies and celebrations.

In the scale developed by Lawrence, social opportunities, emotional factors, and the friends' impact are extracted (21). The first two dimensions are fully consistent with the social and emotional situations of the present study and the influence of friends in the present study is regarded as a high-risk factor. Ebrahimi et al. conducted a survey study using confirmatory factor analysis. According to the results, two categories of internal factors (i.e., positive feelings, negative feelings, relaxation, and emotions) and external factors (i.e., interpersonal, professional, location, and restrictive positions) were approved in the aforementioned study (20).

It seems that the dimension of emotional situations is similar to the category of internal factors, and the dimension of social situations is similar to the interpersonal factors following the external factors; however, the dimensions of location and restrictive situations were not extracted in our questionnaire. The reason for this difference could be that Ebrahimi et al., conducted their study on smokers. And these people's experience of being influenced by location and restrictive situations can be the reason for extracting these factors.

In a study carried out by Karimy et al., only one of the dimensions of the questionnaire examined self-efficacy and predictive behaviors of tobacco use (19). The items of this dimension are consistent with the social situations of the present study. The use of other methods of investigating the validity of the tool, such as convergent and divergent validity as well as test-retest reliability, could lead to the development of a more valid tool; however, this study did not employ other methods, which can be regarded as one of its weaknesses.

 

Implications for Practice

A 16-item valid (S-CVI/Ave=0.99) and reliable (Cronbach's alpha 0.94) tool was designed and developed with three dimensions to measure smoking abstinence self-efficacy in adolescents. This questionnaire assesses the smoking abstinence self-efficacy in three dimensions of emotional, high-risk, and social situations. Moreover, the results obtained from this tool can lead to the development of interventions, such as smoking prevention programs, which can be implemented on adolescents with low smoking abstinence self-efficacy scores.

 

Acknowledgments

This study is extracted from a Master thesis in Community Health Nursing which funded by the Deputy of Research and submitted to Mashhad University of Medical Sciences, Mashhad, Iran (96/163). The authors appreciate and thank all the officials and directors of education in Mashhad, as well as teachers and students who cooperated with conducting this study. The authors also express their gratitude to the panel of experts who assisted in the validation of the tool.

 

Conflicts of Interest

There are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this study.

 

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