Litcius/Paper detail

Instrument development of health providers' Knowledge, Attitude and Practice of Hospice Care Scale in China

Zhiqun Shu, Yiting Wang, Tiantian Li, Limei Jing, Xiaoming Sun

2020The International Journal of Health Planning and Management18 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To match the reform of hospice development in China, this study aimed to construct an indigenized health providers' Knowledge, Attitude and Practice of Hospice Care (KAPHC) Scale in China with good validity and reliability. METHODS: We used three steps to develop the scale, establishing items-pool firstly based on literature review and expert consultation, followed by forming a draft-scale design through synthetically consideration, and finally modifying the draft by conducting a self-administrative survey in sampled institution and testing the reliability and validity by statistical analysis. RESULTS: The KAPHC Scale was comprised of 15 knowledge items, 24 attitude items and 22 practice items. In the part of knowledge, the Cronbach's α coefficient was 0.686, the average difficulty was 0.62 and average discrimination was 0.46. The attitude items were divided into four domains (KMO = 0.770), with Cronbach's α coefficient of 0.868. The practice items included confidence of practices and self-reported behaviors (KMO = 0.732), with Cronbach's α coefficient of 0.958. CONCLUSION: The KAPHC Scale demonstrated good validity and reliability. As an effective tool, the scale may contribute to assessing health providers' KAP status of hospice care and exploring their future education needs in mainland China.

Topics & Concepts

Cronbach's alphaScale (ratio)Reliability (semiconductor)Construct validityPsychologyHealth careContent validityConstruct (python library)Mainland ChinaValidityMedical educationApplied psychologyChinaNursingMedicinePsychometricsClinical psychologyComputer scienceEconomic growthProgramming languagePolitical scienceLawQuantum mechanicsEconomicsPower (physics)PhysicsPalliative Care and End-of-Life IssuesPatient Dignity and PrivacyChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life