Reliability and Validity of a New Building Environmental Quality Questionnaire

Author:

Chan Anson K. C.1,Macfarlane Duncan J.2,Cerin Ester1,Wong Kelvin S. K.3,Ng Chris H. F.3,Ho Daniel C. W.3

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Human Performance, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

2. Institute of Human Performance, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong,

3. Department of Real Estate and Construction, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

Abstract

This study aimed to develop and then test the reliability and validity of a new self-report questionnaire method called the building environmental quality questionnaire (BEQQ) designed to assess the perceived environmental quality in residential apartments in Hong Kong. A total of 108 (46 men and 62 women) Chinese-speaking residents, between 16 and 81 years of age, took part and completed the questionnaire study. The subjects were recruited from 12 different buildings of three distinct quality ratings (low, medium and high) assigned by the building assessment tool called the building health and hygiene index (BHHI). The study was evaluated to determine reliability and this was assessed involving 20 of the participants (18% of the total sample size). The BEQQ was found to have good test-retest reliability, with intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) values typically around 0.70. The validity testing, also using ICCs, generated moderate to high values for all BEQQ sub-categories (the mean value was around 0.80), indicating a good consistency among residents living within the same building. Finally, the summary BEQQ scores were significantly correlated (—0.68) with the BHHI ratings as the criterion standard. It is concluded that this eight-dimension instrument would provide a short and efficient questionnaire method to obtain self-reported information to determine the perceived residential building quality. The method was shown to yield adequate reliability and has been validated for use in empirical research.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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