From an ecological perspective, eating behaviours are determined by a wide range of individual, social and environmental factors as well as by their interactions( Reference McLeroy, Bibeau and Steckler 1 ). To effectively promote healthy eating, it is critical to better understand how these various factors influence eating behaviours. Individual factors have been extensively studied in the last decades( Reference Guillaumie, Godin and Vezina-Im 2 , Reference Shaikh, Yaroch and Nebeling 3 ) and lately an increasing number of studies have documented the association between the physical environment and food choices( Reference Giskes, van Lenthe and Avendano-Pabon 4 , Reference Kamphuis, Giskes and de Bruijn 5 ). However, the influence of social factors on healthy eating has been less studied.
Social or interpersonal factors are likely to influence food choices and eating behaviours not only since meals are frequently shared with other people, but also due to food-related tasks, such as food planning, procurement and preparation, which are frequently divided among family members, partners or roommates( Reference Bove and Sobal 6 ). While children’s eating behaviours are largely determined by parents’ influence( Reference Birch and Fisher 7 , Reference Faith, Scanlon and Birch 8 ), as a person grows up, a part of the social influence shifts from parents to friends, partner and colleagues( Reference Ng, Ntoumanis and Thøgersen-Ntoumani 9 – Reference Marcoux, Trenkner and Rosenstock 11 ).
Social support can be defined as ‘a transactional communicative process, including verbal and/or nonverbal communication, that aims to improve an individual’s feelings of coping, competence, belonging, and/or esteem’( Reference Marifran and Gibb 12 ). To adequately assess the influence of social support on healthy eating, it is crucial that a validated tool be used. The most commonly used scales assessing social support from family and friends for diet and exercise behaviours have been developed by Sallis et al.( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 ) and later modified or adapted by numerous authors for different contexts( Reference Ball and Crawford 14 – Reference Ball, Crawford and Mishra 19 ). Using the original scales or items derived from it, authors have observed associations between social support from family and friends and measures of healthy eating( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 , Reference Williams, Thornton and Crawford 17 , Reference Ball, Crawford and Mishra 19 , Reference Evans, McNeil and Laufman 20 ).
To our knowledge, no questionnaire in French has been developed to specifically assess social support in the context of adherence to a healthy diet. It is recognized that tools need to be adapted and validated if they are to be used across countries( Reference Beaton, Bombardier and Guillemin 21 ). French-Canadians from the Province of Québec have been found to differ from other Canadians with respect to food intakes and attitudes towards eating( Reference Garriguet 22 , 23 ), suggesting that eating-related questionnaires validated in other parts of North America may not be suitable for them. Therefore, the purpose of the present study was to develop and validate a new questionnaire assessing social support for healthy eating in an adult French-Canadian population.
Methods
Development of the items
Based on Sallis et al.( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 ), it was decided that a questionnaire assessing social support from two categories of close others, namely family and friends, would be developed. Participants were asked to rate the frequency, in the past month, with which both family and friends had done the different actions described. It was decided that the actions would relate to the general concept of healthy eating or to junk foods. The majority of the items of the French-Canadian questionnaire were generated based on existing validated tools( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 , Reference Ball and Crawford 14 , Reference Baranowski, Cullen and Baranowski 24 , Reference Kiernan, Moore and Schoffman 25 ). Other items were developed by the research team. A total of twenty-one items were developed. As suggested by Kiernan et al.( Reference Kiernan, Moore and Schoffman 25 ), various forms of social support were assessed through the items, such as verbal support (e.g. ‘[…] encouraged me to eat healthy foods when I was tempted to eat junk food’) and behavioural support (e.g. ‘[…] ate healthy foods in front of me’). We also decided to add items pertaining to the social environment during meals (e.g. ‘[…] contributed to create a pleasant atmosphere at mealtime’). According to the recommendations in Kiernan et al.( Reference Kiernan, Moore and Schoffman 25 ), we opted to use a five-point Likert scale (‘never’, ‘rarely’, ‘sometimes’, ‘often’, ‘very often’). It was also decided that a ‘not applicable’ option would be added to alleviate pressure on participants to answer. Using the cold deck imputation procedure, all ‘not applicable’ answers were replaced by the ‘never’ option, based on the questionnaire from Ball and Crawford( Reference Ball and Crawford 14 ) in which ‘not applicable’ and ‘never’ constitute the same answer option.
Participants and procedures
The questionnaire was developed and validated in the context of a larger study aiming at validating a series of questionnaires on determinants of healthy eating( Reference Carbonneau, Carbonneau and Lamarche 26 – Reference Bradette-Laplante, Carbonneau and Provencher 28 ) and biomarkers of fruit and vegetable intake. The validation process for the Social Support for Healthy Eating Questionnaire was divided into three steps, namely an expert panel evaluation, a pre-test and a validation study.
Expert panel
Content validity was assessed by an expert panel composed of four nutrition researchers, one registered dietitian and one psychology researcher, all familiar with questionnaire development and validation. Content validity involves an assessment of the items to ensure representation of the construct (i.e. social support for healthy eating)( Reference DiIorio 29 ). The experts rated each item of the questionnaire on four-point scales for four criteria: relevance (‘not relevant’=1 to ‘very relevant’=4), clarity (‘not clear’=1 to ‘very clear’=4), simplicity (‘not simple’=1 to ‘very simple’=4) and ambiguity (‘ambiguous’=1 to ‘explicit’=4). Evaluations from the experts were combined to yield a content validity index for each item. According to DiIorio( Reference DiIorio 29 ), a minimum level of 80 % was considered for an adequate content validity. Items with a content validity index lower than the cut-off needed to be modified or removed from the questionnaire.
Pre-test
According to the questionnaire pre-testing sample size recommendation( Reference Perneger, Courvoisier and Hudelson 30 ), a convenience sample consisting of thirty-one participants was recruited from an internal list of people willing to participate in clinical studies, to assess the acceptability and comprehension of the items. Participants were men and women from the Québec City metropolitan area and were aged between 18 and 65 years old. Participants had to have at least minimal informatics skills since questionnaires were completed online.
To assess face validity (i.e. whether the items seemed to measure what the developers claim they measure( Reference DiIorio 29 )), participants from the pre-test were asked to complete the questionnaires online and to comment on the ambiguity of the items in a comments box after each item.
Validation study
A convenience sample of seventy-five women and seventy-five men was used for the validation study. Participants were recruited through electronic mailing lists comprising Laval University students and employees as well as people interested in participating in studies at the Institute of Nutrition and Functional Foods. Inclusion criteria were identical to those used for the pre-test. Participants suffering from conditions affecting intestinal absorption were excluded since blood biomarkers of fruit and vegetable intake were also being validated in the study. Pregnancy and lactation were exclusion criteria. Eligible participants came to the research centre for a blood sample and anthropometric measurements( Reference Callaway, Chumlea and Bouchard 31 ).
Within a month after coming to the laboratory, participants had to complete a series of questionnaires to be validated on the Internet platform of the study. Questionnaires were assigned to participants in a random order. Following a two-week delay, participants were asked to complete each questionnaire a second time within a one-month period. The completion time for the series of questionnaires was approximately 40 min.
Participants received a financial compensation of $CAN 50 for their participation in the study. The study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki( 32 ).
Statistical analyses
The analyses described in this section were performed on data derived from the validation study. An exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was performed on the items to assess the number of factors (or subscales) for the questionnaire, aiming at retaining as few factors as possible while explaining most of the variation in the data. The modified eigenvalue-greater-than-one rule( Reference Larsen and Warne 33 ) and the scree plot( Reference Cattell 34 ) were used to adequately identify the number of factors in the questionnaire. The sample size of the validation study (n 150) respected the recommended 5:1 participant-to-item ratio for factor analyses( Reference Hatcher 35 ). Internal consistency reliability was assessed using Cronbach’s α coefficients with data from the first completion of the questionnaire. The test–retest reliability was assessed with intraclass correlation analyses conducted between scores of the two completions. Statistical tests were two-sided and associations or differences at P<0·05 were considered significant. Analyses were performed using the statistical software package SAS version 9.4 (2013).
Results
Expert panel
Content validity
Of the twenty-one items evaluated, only one item had a content validity index lower than 80 % and it was removed from the questionnaire. One item was also removed from the questionnaire because it was judged to be too similar to another item. Seven items were slightly modified following comments from the experts. Finally, to address recommendations by the experts, three items were added to the questionnaire. These changes resulted in a twenty-two-item questionnaire (see Table 2).
Pre-test
Participants in the pre-test were seventeen women and fourteen men (mean age: 45·6 (sd 13·9) years).
Face validity
Four participants did not complete the social support questionnaire, therefore twenty-seven participants were included for the face validity. Comments expressed by the participants did not lead to any change in the formulation of the twenty-two items. However, following some comments on the classification of close others (e.g. ‘Is an adult child no longer living at home considered as a family member or a friend?’), the labels were changed to facilitate understanding. Therefore, ‘family’ (defined as people living with you) was changed for ‘home’ (defined as people living with you, e.g. family members, partner, roommate). ‘Friends’ (defined as friends, colleagues, acquaintances) was replaced by ‘outside of home’ (defined as people with whom you share meals, but who do not live with you, e.g. friends, colleagues).
Validation study
Of the 150 participants of the validation study, one participant dropped out of the study before completing the questionnaires and one participant did not complete the social support questionnaire. Characteristics of the 148 remaining participants (mean age: 47·5 (sd 13·4) years) are presented in Table 1. The mean completion time of the questionnaire was 5·5 (sd 1·9) min.
Exploratory factor analysis
Since items of the questionnaire were rated separately for two categories (i.e. ‘home’ and ‘outside of home’), EFA was performed separately for each category. The significance of Bartlett’s test of sphericity (‘home’: χ 2=1923·48, P<0·0001; ‘outside of home’: χ 2=1130·61, P<0·0001) and the Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin test of sampling adequacy (measures of sample adequacy >0·50) revealed that our sets of items had adequate common variance, justifying the use of an EFA( Reference Tabachnick and Fidell 36 ). When looking at data from ‘home’ and ‘outside of home’, respectively five and four factors had eigenvalues (including their 95 % CI) greater than 1·0. However, the analysis of the scree plots from the EFA revealed a notable difference in the slope after the first two factors for ‘home’ and ‘outside of home’. Therefore, it was decided that the items of the questionnaire would be divided into two factors for both ‘home’ and ‘outside of home’. The two factors accounted for 82·88 % of the variance in the data from ‘home’ and for 81·17 % of the variance in the data from ‘outside of home’. To obtain simple and interpretable factors, and since factors were expected to covary, oblique promax rotations were used for both the ‘home’ and ‘outside of home’ categories. Using a minimum loading cut-off of 0·30 or higher( Reference Costello and Osbourne 37 ), two items did not load on any factor and were therefore removed from the questionnaire (see Table 2).
The French version of the instrument was validated. All items were translated from French to English using the back-translation procedure and should not be used in their English version without validation.
* Factor loadings are presented as: ‘home’/‘outside of home’. Close others at ‘home’ are defined as people living with you (e.g. family members, partner, roommate). Close others ‘outside of home’ are defined as people with whom you share meals, but who do not live with you (e.g. friends, colleagues.)
† Items that were removed after the exploratory factor analysis.
With this factor structure, twelve items were found to load on the first factor and eight items on the second factor, as seen in Table 2. The same factor structure was obtained for both ‘home’ and ‘outside of home’. The factors were named according to what the items of each subscale have in common. Therefore, the first factor was named ‘supportive actions’ (e.g. ‘[…] proposed that we eat healthier’) and the second was named ‘non-supportive actions’ (e.g. ‘[…] criticized the healthy foods I prepared’). Since the questionnaire is divided into two factors and two categories (i.e. ‘home’ and ‘outside of home’), it was decided that the questionnaire would be scored on four distinct subscales: supportive actions at home; non-supportive actions at home; supportive actions outside of home; and non-supportive outside of home. Subscale scores were obtained by calculating the mean of the items. Thus, higher scores for the supportive and the non-supportive scales mean a higher frequency of these types of action. To verify if the presence of supportive actions reflects the absence of non-supportive actions, correlations between the two factors were assessed. Supportive actions and non-supportive actions score were significantly correlated within the ‘home’ category (r=0·27, P=0·0010) and the ‘outside of home’ category (r=0·34, P<0·0001). Mean scores for the four subscales are presented in Table 3.
Scores are on a maximum of 5 points. Higher scores for the supportive and the non-supportive scales mean a higher frequency of these types of action.
† n 148.
‡ n 142
§ n 146.
Internal consistency reliability
As seen in Table 3, all scores were considered internally reliable, with all Cronbach’s α coefficients being >0·70.
Test–retest reliability
Intraclass correlation coefficients between both completions were calculated for the participants who completed the scale twice (n 146). As shown in Table 3, correlations indicate moderate reliability( Reference Koo and Li 38 ) for all subscales (ρ=0·51 to 0·67). The mean lapse between test and retest was 40·9 (sd 11·5) d.
Discussion
The purpose of the present study was to develop and validate a questionnaire assessing social support for healthy eating for a French-Canadian population. We decided to create a full questionnaire and proceeded to a complete validation of the items developed, unlike many authors who have assessed social support using only a few items from other validated questionnaires without proceeding to a validation of these items taken separately. We decided to create a questionnaire targeting the whole population, and not only people wishing to adopt a healthier lifestyle. Therefore, items pertain to the global concepts of healthy eating and junk foods. Other questionnaires already exist to assess various forms of goal support that can be provided by family and friends to an individual aiming at changing a behaviour (e.g. Koestner et al.( Reference Koestner, Powers and Carbonneau 39 )). Items were generated based on existing questionnaires or developed by the research team. Given that the items developed by Sallis et al.( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 ) are largely used in the literature, this questionnaire was an important source of inspiration for the development of our questionnaire. We were also inspired by the modifications proposed by Ball and Crawford( Reference Ball and Crawford 14 ) and Kiernan et al.( Reference Kiernan, Moore and Schoffman 25 ), such as using the same items for both types of close others.
Face validity was used to assess pre-test participants’ understanding of the items. This led to an important improvement in the wording used to describe the two categories of close others, to reduce ambiguity (change from ‘family’ to ‘home’ and from ‘friends’ to ‘outside of home’). This change in the labels led to a classification focusing on the context of the interactions more than on the nature of the relationship itself. We think that our classification will bring interesting information about the role of social support from important others whether living or not with them, which is not the case with other existing social support questionnaires. When living with someone, whether it is a partner, a family member or a friend, numerous interactions around food and eating are likely to happen, while preparing and sharing meals. However, our results may not be directly comparable to most other social support questionnaires using ‘family/friends’ categories.
Items were developed to assess three types of social support, namely verbal support, behavioural support and social environment during meals. Therefore, it was expected that the EFA would yield to a three-factor structure. However, the two-factor structure uncovered by the analysis is in line with the structure of the original social support scales by Sallis et al.( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 ) and the adapted versions( Reference Ball and Crawford 14 , Reference Kiernan, Moore and Schoffman 25 ). The EFA also resulted in the removal of two items pertaining to the meal environment. Those items may not be directly related to the social support concept.
The four subscales were found to be internally reliable, meaning that items within each subscale related well with one another. The two factors were moderately correlated within the ‘home’ category and the ‘outside of home’ category. These results indicate that the factors are tapping distinct concepts and that the use of two subscales is relevant. Sallis et al.( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 ) reported stronger correlations between the different forms of support (family: r=0·45; friends: r=0·38), but yet considered that the factors did not overlap. The correlations we observed between the two types of actions suggest that many participants received both supportive and non-supportive actions from their close others. In future research, it would be interesting to assess if the presence of non-supportive actions alleviates the influence of supportive actions on healthy eating behaviours. In the present study, participants were not asked to specify who did which action. Therefore, we do not know if some individuals are perceived to be both supportive and non-supportive, or if the various actions reported by participants originate from different persons.
In the present study, intraclass correlation coefficients indicated moderate test–retest reliability (i.e. coefficients between 0·51 and 0·67) for all four subscales. The delay between the two completions was variable, from 14 to 99 d. Few authors have assessed this type of validation of a social support for healthy eating questionnaire. Sallis et al.( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 ) obtained stronger correlation coefficients, varying from 0·57 to 0·86, but the time period between the two completions is not mentioned in the article. Baranowski et al.( Reference Baranowski, Cullen and Baranowski 24 ) assessed a six-week test–retest reliability of their questionnaire on family social support for purchasing fruits and vegetables, obtaining correlation coefficients that were also higher than in the present study (r=0·74 and 0·73). Our lower test–retest coefficient can be partly explained by the variable time period between the two completions due to the study design. It is also important to note that the intraclass correlation coefficients were higher for ‘supportive actions at home’ than for ‘supportive actions outside of home’ subscales (ρ= 0·65 v. ρ=0·51). This suggests that social support outside of home, from friends, colleagues and acquaintances, is more likely to vary with time. Accordingly, it is possible that there is more stability in people with whom one shares meals at home than outside of home. The varying nature of social support stresses the importance of choosing wisely the time frame of the questionnaire. Therefore, when social support is compared with food intake, it is all the more important that the time period of the social support questionnaire matches with the period covered by the food intake questionnaire.
Strengths and limitations
Some limitations of the present study should be acknowledged. The study population was mostly Caucasian and highly educated, and therefore not representative of the whole French-Canadian population( 40 ), which can limit the external validity. Also, the current validation study could have benefited from a comparison between the newly developed questionnaire and other tools assessing social support, as it would have increased the content validity. However, other authors have compared social support for healthy eating with a general social support score and have found no significant association, suggesting that specific types of support may vary in quantity and may come from different people than what general social support scales usually measure( Reference Sallis, Grossman and Pinski 13 ).
An important strength of the study is the fact that it was designed expressly for the validation of questionnaires. The three main steps, namely the expert panel, the pre-test and the validation study, were followed for each questionnaire to be validated, resulting in a rigorous validation process.
Conclusions
The present study aimed at validating the Social Support for Healthy Eating Questionnaire, developed in a French-Canadian population. The design of the questionnaire was inspired from existing tools and demonstrated good psychometric properties. Data from test–retest analyses suggest that social support may vary within relatively short periods of time. Hence, research schedules should be carefully planned to ensure that social support is assessed as closely as possible to other measures related to food intake and behaviours. This questionnaire will be useful to explore the role of social support and its interactions with other factors in predicting healthy dietary habits and eating behaviours. The questionnaire developed in the present study is a valid and reliable tool for the French-Canadian adult population, but extra validation is recommended if the tool is to be used in other populations.
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements: The authors express their gratitude to the participants for their involvement in the study. The authors would like to acknowledge the work of Catherine Laramée who contributed significantly to the conduction of the study. Financial support: The present study was supported by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR; grant number FHG 129921). E.C. is a recipient of a scholarship from the Food Quality Observatory. The funders had no role in the design, analysis or writing of this article. Conflict of interest: None. Authorship: S.L., B.L., V.P., C.B., J.R., S.D. and M.-C.V. contributed in designing the study. L.C. and M.B.-L. were responsible for carrying out the study. M.B.-L., S.L. and E.C. were responsible for developing the questionnaire. V.P., C.B., J.R., S.D., M.C.-V. and L.C. were members of the expert panel. E.C. analysed the data and wrote the article. All co-authors revised and approved the final version of the paper. Ethics of human subject participation: This study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki and all procedures involving human subjects were approved by the Research Ethics Committee at Laval University. Implicit informed consent was obtained from the pre-test participants and all participants from the validation study gave written informed consent.