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      Validity and Reliability of the Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale in Turkey

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          Abstract

          AIM

          This study aimed to establish the validity and reliability of the Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale in Turkey.

          METHOD

          This methodological study was conducted between December, 2014, and July, 2017, in the neonatal intensive care unit of 4 hospitals (2 public, 1 university, and 1 private hospital) in the center of a city in eastern Turkey. The study population consisted of all the nurses of the hospitals. No sampling was performed, and the sample consisted of 145 nurses who agreed to participate in the study. The 26-item Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale developed by Kain et al. (2009) was translated into Turkish and then back-translated into English for to determine the validity for Turkey. Experts were consulted to determine the validity of the content. Cronbach’s alpha coefficient, test-retest reliability, and item-total correlation were used for reliability. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analyses were used for validity.

          RESULTS

          Content validity index ranged from .8 to 1.0. The Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin measure of sampling adequacy was .934, for which the Bartlett’s test of sphericity was χ 2 = 415.127, p = .000. According to the principal component analysis, the Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale in Turkey. had 3 subscales as did the original Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale. The items had factor loadings greater than .40, and the factors accounted for 55.51% of the total variance. The subscales “organization,” “resources,” and “clinician” had a Cronbach’s alpha of .692, .710, and .680, respectively.

          CONCLUSION

          The Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale in Turkey. has a structure similar to that of the original Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale and has high validity and reliability. It is, therefore, a valid and reliable instrument that can be used to identify nurses’ attitudes toward neonatal palliative care.

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          Most cited references30

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          Selection and use of content experts for instrument development.

          Content experts frequently are used in the judgment-quantification stage of content validation of instruments. However, errors in instrumentation may arise when important steps in selecting and using these experts are not carefully planned. The systematic process of choosing, orienting, and using content experts in the judgment-qualification stage of instrument development is addressed, with particular attention to the often neglected, important step of familiarizing these experts with the conceptual underpinnings and measurement model of the instrument. An example using experts to validate content for a measure of caregiver burden is used to illustrate this stage of instrument review.
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            Confirmatory Factor Analysis

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              Neonatal palliative care attitude scale: development of an instrument to measure the barriers to and facilitators of palliative care in neonatal nursing.

              The aim of this research project was to obtain an understanding of the barriers to and facilitators of providing palliative care in neonatal nursing. This article reports the first phase of this research: to develop and administer an instrument to measure the attitudes of neonatal nurses to palliative care. The instrument developed for this research (the Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale) underwent face and content validity testing with an expert panel and was pilot tested to establish temporal stability. It was then administered to a population sample of 1285 neonatal nurses in Australian NICUs, with a response rate of 50% (N = 645). Exploratory factor-analysis techniques were conducted to identify scales and subscales of the instrument. Data-reduction techniques using principal components analysis were used. Using the criteria of eigenvalues being >1, the items in the Neonatal Palliative Care Attitude Scale extracted 6 factors, which accounted for 48.1% of the variance among the items. By further examining the questions within each factor and the Cronbach's alpha of items loading on each factor, factors were accepted or rejected. This resulted in acceptance of 3 factors indicating the barriers to and facilitators of palliative care practice. The constructs represented by these factors indicated barriers to and facilitators of palliative care practice relating to (1) the organization in which the nurse practices, (2) the available resources to support a palliative model of care, and (3) the technological imperatives and parental demands. The subscales identified by this analysis identified items that measured both barriers to and facilitators of palliative care practice in neonatal nursing. While establishing preliminary reliability of the instrument by using exploratory factor-analysis techniques, further testing of this instrument with different samples of neonatal nurses is necessary using a confirmatory factor-analysis approach.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Florence Nightingale J Nurs
                Florence Nightingale J Nurs
                Florence Nightingale Journal of Nursing
                Florence Nightingale Journal of Nursing
                2687-6442
                June 2021
                1 June 2021
                : 29
                : 2
                : 212-220
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Dentistry Services, Artvin Çoruh University, Health Services Vocational School, Artvin, Turkey
                [2 ]Department of Child Health and Disease Nursing, İstanbul Medeniyet University, Faculty of Health Sciences, İstanbul, Turkey
                Author notes
                Corresponding author: Aynur Aytekin Özdemir, E-mail: aynuraytekin25@ 123456hotmail.com
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0003-1706-2489
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-4738-0747
                Article
                fnjn-29-2-212
                10.5152/FNJN.2021.20041
                8245023
                34263240
                08bcfa05-fc8c-4e09-bddb-1f31aced2891
                Copyright © 2021 Florence Nightingale Journal of Nursing

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License

                History
                : 23 March 2020
                : 16 July 2020
                Categories
                Research Article

                attitude,neonate,nursing,palliative care,validity-reliability

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