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ORIGINAL RESEARCH

A Scale Development for Visual Literacy on Health Students and Professionals

ORCID Icon &
Pages 3129-3141 | Received 10 Jun 2023, Accepted 25 Sep 2023, Published online: 25 Oct 2023
 

Abstract

Objective

Viewing that there is a lack of valid and reliable measures to assess visual literacy in clinical and healthcare settings, this study aimed to develop a visual literacy scale to assess health students’ and professionals’ visual literacy, by which teachers can further help them sharpen their visual literacy skills and sensitivity to let them reach effective communication in clinical and healthcare settings.

Methods

The scale was constructed according to Slavec and Drnovšek’s three-phase scale development process: theoretical significance and existence of the scale construct, representative data collection and appropriate data collection methods, and statistical analysis of data collection and statistical evidence of the scale construct. To investigate the psychometrical properties, the researchers first performed a pilot study on randomly selected 464 health students and professionals, using exploratory factor analysis (EFA) with SPSS to derive the hidden factor structure, and then on randomly selected 303 participants, using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) with AMOS to validate the derived factor structure. Internal consistency, convergent validities, discriminant validities, and goodness-of-fit indices were also examined in the study.

Results

After going through the EFA, 30 items in three factors were identified: “allegorical meaning” (12 items), “explicit meaning” (10 items), and “symbolic meaning” (8 items). The three factors explained 73.191 of the total variance. The CFA generated the same three factors and 22 items: “allegorical meaning” (12 items), “explicit meaning” (4 items), and “symbolic meaning” (6 items). The three factors accounted for 75.022% of variance. Both the EFA and CFA models demonstrated satisfactory goodness-of-fit and good convergent and discriminant validities. Regarding the reliabilities, the Cronbach’s alpha values in the EFA and CFA models were all above 0.90.

Conclusion

The findings have demonstrated that the VLS-HSP can be a formal instrument to measure visual literacy on health students and professionals.

Acknowledgments

The researchers express appreciation to all study participants.

Disclosure

The authors report no conflicts of interest in this work.