JOURNAL ARTICLE
Turkish Validation of the Simplified Omaha System Terms for Use Within a Mobile Health Application.
Published In: Research & Theory for Nursing Practice, 2026, v. 40, n. 1. P. 33 1 of 3
Database: CINAHL Ultimate 2 of 3
Authored By: Secginli, Selda; Yas, Merve Altiner; Austin, Robin R.; Monsen, Karen A. 3 of 3
Abstract
Background and Purpose: Most mobile health applications may be unstandardized and have not been simplified for use by a wide range of community users. Therefore, it can potentially affect data quality due to a lack of validated translation and cross-cultural adaptation. This study aimed to evaluate the validity of the Turkish version of the Simplified Omaha System Terms (T-SOST) for use within a consumer-facing application, MyStrengths MyHealth (MSMH). Methods: The descriptive study comprised three phases: (a) language validity, (b) content validity, and (c) readability assessment and pilot testing. A total of 20 experts assessed the content validity. The Ateşman Readability Formula was used to conduct the readability assessment of T-SOST. The MSMH was used by 74 participants to test the T-SOST in the study. Results: The scale-level content validity index of T-SOST ranged from.963 to.999. The reading level of T-SOST averaged 82.66 ± 15.62. In the pilot test, the most frequently reported strengths were Speech and Language (f = 67) and Cleaning (f = 63). The most frequent challenges were for Emotions (f = 177) and Income (f = 95). Information/guidance was the most frequent need for Emotions (f = 19). Check-ins were the most frequent need for Income (f = 17). Implications for Nursing Practice: The T-SOST had acceptable psychometric properties and was found to be understandable for secondary education. It is suitable for self-reported strengths, challenges, and needs embedded in MSMH. Consumer-generated data may allow individuals to directly participate in their own health and provide insight for nurses and other clinicians to tailor interventions from a patient-centered perspective.
Additional Information
- Source:Research & Theory for Nursing Practice. 2026/01, Vol. 40, Issue 1, p33
- Document Type:Journal Article
- Subject Area:Computer Science
- Publication Date:2026
- ISSN:1541-6577
- DOI:10.1891/RTNP-2024-0172
- Accession Number:192155741
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