University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing

Issue addressed: Understanding the health behaviours of Australian university students and their impact on wellbeing and academic success is important; however, there are limited reliable, population level survey tools to measure student health across a range of domains. The purpose of the research...

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Main Authors: Wold, C., Hallett, Jonathan, Crawford, Gemma, Chih, Jun, Burns, Sharyn, Jancey, Jonine
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: WILEY 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/78950
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author Wold, C.
Hallett, Jonathan
Crawford, Gemma
Chih, Jun
Burns, Sharyn
Jancey, Jonine
author_facet Wold, C.
Hallett, Jonathan
Crawford, Gemma
Chih, Jun
Burns, Sharyn
Jancey, Jonine
author_sort Wold, C.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Issue addressed: Understanding the health behaviours of Australian university students and their impact on wellbeing and academic success is important; however, there are limited reliable, population level survey tools to measure student health across a range of domains. The purpose of the research was to determine the reliability of the web-based University Student Health and Wellbeing Study (USHWS) survey via a test-retest reliability study within a large Australian university student population. Methods: A test-retest of the measurement instrument was completed by a sample of university students (n = 195) over a two-week period. The instrument assessed alcohol and tobacco use, mental health, sexual health, physical activity, nutrition and sun protective behaviours. Test-retest reliability was analysed using two-way random effects model of intraclass correlations (ICC) and AC1 coefficient for individual measurements with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Results: Questions on demographics, general health, nutrition, sun protection, alcohol and tobacco use, mental health and sexual health had fair to high reliability (ICCs range from 0.32 to 1.00). Reliability of some physical activity items were poor with large variability (ICC = 0.15, 95% CI 0.01-0.28 to 0.86, 95% CI 0.82-0.89). Conclusions: A majority of the USHWS survey items represented a moderate to high test-retest reliability. Variability and poor reliability of physical activity questions may be due to survey implementation time and usual behaviour changes. So what?: The USHWS survey is reliable instrument to assess Australian university student health at a population level with the aim of informing effective programming, policy and initiatives. Summary: The University Student Health and Wellbeing Study (USHWS) survey is a foundational tool to understand university student’s health in Australia. The USHWS reported fair to high reliability with few physical activity items showing lower reliability. Greater variability may be due to usual day-to-day fluctuations in behaviour.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-789502020-06-22T03:03:38Z University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing Wold, C. Hallett, Jonathan Crawford, Gemma Chih, Jun Burns, Sharyn Jancey, Jonine Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Public, Environmental & Occupational Health health and well-being health promoting universities surveys test-retest reliability universities PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY QUESTIONNAIRE STRATEGIES STRESS Issue addressed: Understanding the health behaviours of Australian university students and their impact on wellbeing and academic success is important; however, there are limited reliable, population level survey tools to measure student health across a range of domains. The purpose of the research was to determine the reliability of the web-based University Student Health and Wellbeing Study (USHWS) survey via a test-retest reliability study within a large Australian university student population. Methods: A test-retest of the measurement instrument was completed by a sample of university students (n = 195) over a two-week period. The instrument assessed alcohol and tobacco use, mental health, sexual health, physical activity, nutrition and sun protective behaviours. Test-retest reliability was analysed using two-way random effects model of intraclass correlations (ICC) and AC1 coefficient for individual measurements with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI). Results: Questions on demographics, general health, nutrition, sun protection, alcohol and tobacco use, mental health and sexual health had fair to high reliability (ICCs range from 0.32 to 1.00). Reliability of some physical activity items were poor with large variability (ICC = 0.15, 95% CI 0.01-0.28 to 0.86, 95% CI 0.82-0.89). Conclusions: A majority of the USHWS survey items represented a moderate to high test-retest reliability. Variability and poor reliability of physical activity questions may be due to survey implementation time and usual behaviour changes. So what?: The USHWS survey is reliable instrument to assess Australian university student health at a population level with the aim of informing effective programming, policy and initiatives. Summary: The University Student Health and Wellbeing Study (USHWS) survey is a foundational tool to understand university student’s health in Australia. The USHWS reported fair to high reliability with few physical activity items showing lower reliability. Greater variability may be due to usual day-to-day fluctuations in behaviour. 2020 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/78950 10.1002/hpja.331 English WILEY restricted
spellingShingle Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
health and well-being
health promoting universities
surveys
test-retest reliability
universities
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY QUESTIONNAIRE
STRATEGIES
STRESS
Wold, C.
Hallett, Jonathan
Crawford, Gemma
Chih, Jun
Burns, Sharyn
Jancey, Jonine
University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing
title University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing
title_full University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing
title_fullStr University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing
title_full_unstemmed University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing
title_short University Student Health and Wellbeing Study: A test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing
title_sort university student health and wellbeing study: a test-retest reliability study of a web-based survey investigating undergraduate student health and wellbeing
topic Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Public, Environmental & Occupational Health
health and well-being
health promoting universities
surveys
test-retest reliability
universities
PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY QUESTIONNAIRE
STRATEGIES
STRESS
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/78950