Main Article Content
Multidimensional health locus of control scales: applicability among Ghanaian adolescents
Abstract
Objectives: To examine the validity, reliability and cross-cultural correspondence of the MHLC scales among Ghanaian adolescents.
Design: Cross-sectional questionnaire survey.
Setting: Secondary schools in the Awutu-Effutu-Senya district of Ghana, 1998.
Subjects: The analysis is based on 504 secondary school children constituting a response rate of 86%.
Intervention: Non-intervention study.
Main outcome measures: The MHLC score comprising beliefs in own control over health, beliefs in provider control over health and beliefs in chance health outcomes.
Results: Fifty per cent urban and 48% rural pupils recorded health as an important issue. More than 90% of the participants were correctly informed regarding oral health consequences of tooth cleaning, tobacco smoking and sugar consumption. Exploratory factor analysis gave two sub-factors of the MHLC corresponding to internal and provider control over health and having internal consistency reliability of 0.72 and 0.76, respectively.
Conclusion: The results lend support to the cultural correspondence of the MHLC instrument, several aspects of its validity and internal consistency reliability.
(East African Medical Journal: 2002 79(3): 128-133)