Development of the PEA-PODS (Perceptions of the Environment and Patterns of Diet at School) survey for students

  • Hannah G. Lane
  • , Rebecca Driessen
  • , Katherine Campbell
  • , Rachel Deitch
  • , Lindsey Turner
  • , Elizabeth A. Parker
  • , Erin R. Hager

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

13 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction Few instruments assess key outcomes of school-based obesity interventions, including student perceptions of school environments and school-specific dietary intake patterns. This study describes development of PEA-PODS (Perceptions of the Environment and Patterns of Diet at School), a 2-part survey to measure these outcomes. Methods Part 1 (PEA) assessed student perceptions of policies, physical environment, and practices related to healthy eating and physical activity at school. Part 2 (PODS) assessed usual intake (ie, frequency, location obtained, and foods consumed) of breakfast and lunch. Foods consumed were presented by MyPlate categories (eg, Fruits, Grains). Students in grades 3, 6, and 9 participated in 2 phases: cognitive pre-testing (n = 10) and reliability/validation testing (n = 58). Both surveys were administered 1 week apart to assess test-retest reliability and 5-day food records validated PODS. Analyses included percent agreement (70% = acceptable), Pearson correlations, and Cronbach α. Results Cognitive pre-testing provided feedback on content, length, and age-appropriateness. Percent agreements were acceptable for testretest reliability of PEA (71%-96%). The final version included 34 items with Likert-type responses in 4 subscales (α ≥0.78). For PODS, agreement for breakfast and lunch location was ≥75% for both reliability and validation. For foods consumed at breakfast, reliability agreement ranged from 74% to 93%, and validation agreement from 68% to 91%. For foods consumed at lunch, agreement ranges were 76% to 95% and 73% to 88%, respectively. Conclusion Both parts of the instrument demonstrate acceptable reliability, and PODS demonstrates acceptable validity. This demonstrates appropriateness for assessing perceptions of the environment and usual dietary intake patterns for school-based obesity prevention initiatives.

Original languageEnglish
Article number170561
JournalPreventing Chronic Disease
Volume15
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Jun 2018

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Development of the PEA-PODS (Perceptions of the Environment and Patterns of Diet at School) survey for students'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this