Introduction: The period of adolescence is characterized by marked changes
relevant to adult life. The goals of this study were (a) to analyze the psychometric
properties of the physical self-concept questionnaire (PSC) in adolescents and (b) to
develop percentiles for evaluation by age and sex.
Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional study was conducted in adolescents aged
11 to 17 years from an altitude region of Peru (3,812 m above sea level). The sample
size was 1,263 schoolchildren (609 males and 654 females). The PSC was measured
through the survey technique. The questionnaire proposed by Fox and Corbin
(1989), composed of five dimensions (totaling 30 questions), was applied. Validity
was assessed by means of confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and reliability by means
of internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha). Percentiles were calculated using the LMS
method (lambda: skewness, median; M and S: coefficient of variation).
Results and Discussion: In the CFA, factor loadings (communalities) were satisfactory
for the model. Values ranged from (0.30 to 0.60), in addition, the Kaiser–Meyer–
Olkin sample adequacy test was 0.89, X2 = 3401.086 (gl: 395, p<0.00), CFI (0.898),
RMSEA (0.078) and % variation 47%. The reliability values (Cronbach’s alpha) per
question evidenced values from r = 0.80 to 0.81 and the total scale r = 0.81. Percentiles
were calculated: p3, p5, p10, p15, p25, p50, p75, p80, p85, p90, and p95. This study
concludes that the psychometric properties of the PSC questionnaire applied to
adolescents living in an altitude region of Peru were valid and reliable. The proposed
percentiles can be used to categorize and monitor PSC by age and sex. These results
suggest their use and application in the school system.