Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Psychometric Testing of a Rehabilitative Care Patient Experience Instrument

Publication date: September 2018

Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 99, Issue 9

Author(s): Josephine McMurray, Heather McNeil, Alicia Gordon, Jacobi Elliott, Paul Stolee

Abstract
Objective

To evaluate the internal consistency and test-retest reliability, construct validity, and feasibility of the WatLX, a measure of the experience of patients in rehabilitative care.

Design

Multisite, cross-sectional, and test-retest self-report study.

Setting

Outpatient rehabilitative care settings.

Participants

The WatLX was administered to English-speaking, cognitively intact outpatients (N=1174) over 18 years old who had completed a program of cardiac, musculoskeletal, neurologic, stroke, pulmonary, or speech language rehabilitative care, at 2 separate time points: (1) immediately following completion of their rehabilitation program, and (2) 2 weeks later (n=29). A subsequent feasibility study was conducted with 1013 patients from 19 clinics.

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures

The WatLX measures 6 concepts, previously identified as key to outpatient rehabilitative care patients’ experience: (1) ecosystem issues, (2) client and informal caregiver engagement, (3) patient and health care provider relations, (4) pain and functional status, (5) group and individual identity, and (6) open-ended feedback.

Results

Reliability analyses were conducted on 2 versions of the WatLX. Using a 7-point versus a 5-point Likert scale resulted in higher internal consistency and reliability scores. Cronbach’s alpha coefficients were .863 and .957 for the 5- and 7-point scale, respectively, and the ICC scores were .827 and .880, respectively. The proof of concept study recruited 1013 patients with little interruption of workflow; results displayed strong internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha coefficient =.906). There is evidence of ceiling effects.

Conclusions

The WatLX is a parsimonious question set that is feasible for administration in ambulatory rehabilitative care settings, and which shows promising psychometric properties.



from ScienceDirect Publication: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation https://ift.tt/2PETePn
via IFTTT

No comments:

Post a Comment