Evidence of item bias in a national flourishing measure for autistic youth

Author:

Ross Samantha M.1ORCID,Haegele Justin A.2,Anderson Kristy3,Healy Sean4

Affiliation:

1. College of Applied Health Sciences, West Virginia University Morgantown West Virginia USA

2. Old Dominion University, 2009 Student Recreation Center Norfolk Virginia USA

3. College of Social Work, Florida State University Tallahassee Florida USA

4. Department of Physical Education and Sports Science University of Limerick Limerick Ireland

Abstract

AbstractFlourishing is a positive health indicator that aligns with strengths‐based perspectives and measures within autism research. Flourishing indicators were recently included in the National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH) and have been used to evidence disparities in flourishing experienced by autistic children compared to non‐autistic peers. Yet, little has been done to examine the utility of standard flourishing items for this population. This study examined the NSCH caregiver‐reported flourishing items for measurement item bias. A cross‐sectional, representative sample of autistic and non‐autistic US children aged 6–17 years (n = 41,691) was drawn from the 2018–2019 NSCH public dataset. A confirmatory factor analysis using a multiple indicators and multiple causes model (MIMIC‐CFA) was conducted to (1) test for differential item functioning (DIF; i.e., measurement bias); and (2) estimate latent mean group differences after controlling for DIF. Findings supported a 3‐factor (social competence, school motivation, and behavioral control), 10‐item model structure consistent with past literature, yet measurement bias was evident for 6 of the 10 items. Persistent group differences, after accounting for DIF and covariates, indicates that caregivers of autistic children perceive their children are experiencing meaningfully lower flourishing outcomes compared to caregivers of non‐autistic children. However, evidence of measurement bias for items related to the social competence dimension calls into question the applicability of this measure for autistic children. Further interpretation of group differences and use of this measure should be approached with caution.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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