Publication: Psychometric properties of the Turkish version of the neonatal eating assessment tool-breastfeeding (NeoEAT-Breastfeeding)
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KU-Authors
KU Authors
Co-Authors
Gozen, Duygu
Girgin, Burcu Aykanat
Pados, Britt
Carikci, Fatma
Kul, Yagmur
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No
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Abstract
Background Literature reports indicate that breastfeeding is often ended earlier than planned, within the first 6 months. Assessment tools can help nursing professionals identify early breastfeeding problems to identify interventions to support families in meeting their breastfeeding goals. Here we present our analyses of the validity/reliability of the Neonatal Eating Assessment Tool (NeoEAT)-Breastfeeding adapted to the Turkish language for use in post-discharge infants in T & uuml;rkiye. Methods A Turkish version of the NeoEAT-Breastfeeding was created and applied to 310 mothers of term and preterm infants (corrected age < 7 months) between June 2023 and April 2024. Validity and reliability were assessed using Cronbach's alpha coefficients, exploratory/confirmatory factor analysis, and item-total correlation, test-retest, and known-groups analysis. Results The Turkish NeoEAT-Breastfeeding includes 59 items in 6 factors with 48.047% total explained variance. Exploratory factor analysis indicated that item factor loadings ranged from 0.314 to 0.788. Known-group analysis confirmed that infants with diagnosed feeding problems had higher total and subscale scores than those without (P < 0.05). The Cronbach's alpha coefficient was 0.87. Item-total correlations were sufficient (0.302-0.753; P < 0.01). There was excellent agreement between test values and retest values obtained after a two-week interval (intraclass correlation coefficients = 0.904-1.000). Conclusion The Turkish NeoEAT-Breastfeeding was shown to be a reliable and valid parent-reported measure of feeding problems in breastfed infants younger than 7 months of corrected age after discharge.
Source
Publisher
Bmc
Subject
Nursing
Citation
Has Part
Source
Bmc nursing
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DOI
10.1186/s12912-025-03120-x
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CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs)
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Creative Commons license
Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs)

