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Journal Article

Citation

Mendoza JA, Watson K, Baranowski T, Nicklas TA, Uscanga DK, Hanfling MJ. BMC Public Health 2010; 10(1): 257.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/1471-2458-10-257

PMID

20482778

PMCID

PMC2887818

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Safe Routes to School (SRTS) programs are designed to make walking and bicycling to school safe and accessible for children. Despite their growing popularity, few validated measures exist for assessing important outcomes such as type of student transport or pedestrian safety behaviors. This research validated the SRTS school travel survey and a pedestrian safety behavior checklist. METHODS: Fourth grade students completed a brief written survey on how they got to school that day with set responses. Test-retest reliability was obtained 3-4 hours apart. Convergent validity of the SRTS travel survey was assessed by comparison to parents' report. For the measure of pedestrian safety behavior, 10 research assistants observed 29 students at a school intersection for completion of 8 selected pedestrian safety behaviors. Reliability was determined in two ways: correlations between the research assistants' ratings to that of the Principal Investigator (PI) and intraclass correlations (ICC) across research assistant ratings. RESULTS: The SRTS travel survey had high test-retest reliability (kappa=0.97, n=96, p<0.001) and convergent validity (kappa=0.87, n=81, p<0.001). The pedestrian safety behavior checklist had moderate reliability across research assistants' ratings (ICC=0.48) and moderate correlation with the PI (r=0.55, p=<0.01). When two raters simultaneously used the instrument, the ICC increased to 0.65. Overall percent agreement (91%), sensitivity (85%) and specificity (83%) were acceptable. CONCLUSIONS: These validated instruments can be used to assess SRTS programs. The pedestrian safety behavior checklist may benefit from further formative work.


Language: en

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