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      Is the CVI an acceptable indicator of content validity? Appraisal and recommendations.

      1 , ,
      Research in nursing & health
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Nurse researchers typically provide evidence of content validity for instruments by computing a content validity index (CVI), based on experts' ratings of item relevance. We compared the CVI to alternative indexes and concluded that the widely-used CVI has advantages with regard to ease of computation, understandability, focus on agreement of relevance rather than agreement per se, focus on consensus rather than consistency, and provision of both item and scale information. One weakness is its failure to adjust for chance agreement. We solved this by translating item-level CVIs (I-CVIs) into values of a modified kappa statistic. Our translation suggests that items with an I-CVI of .78 or higher for three or more experts could be considered evidence of good content validity.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Res Nurs Health
          Research in nursing & health
          Wiley
          0160-6891
          0160-6891
          Aug 2007
          : 30
          : 4
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Humanalysis, Inc., 75 Clinton Street, Saratoga Springs, NY 12866, USA.
          Article
          10.1002/nur.20199
          17654487
          e106a657-b40d-4d81-96cf-72be59dbf020
          History

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