Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.

BACKGROUND:The Four Habits Coding Scheme (4-HCS) is a standardized instrument designed to assess physicians' communication skills from an external rater's perspective, based on video-recorded consultations. OBJECTIVE:To perform the cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-HCS into French and to...

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Main Authors: Alexandre Bellier, Philippe Chaffanjon, Edward Krupat, Patrice Francois, José Labarère
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230672
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spelling doaj-7e653879bf0b4b64b790d7fc6bfcc9642021-03-03T21:38:46ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01154e023067210.1371/journal.pone.0230672Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.Alexandre BellierPhilippe ChaffanjonEdward KrupatPatrice FrancoisJosé LabarèreBACKGROUND:The Four Habits Coding Scheme (4-HCS) is a standardized instrument designed to assess physicians' communication skills from an external rater's perspective, based on video-recorded consultations. OBJECTIVE:To perform the cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-HCS into French and to assess its psychometric properties. METHODS:The 4-HCS was cross-culturally adapted by conducting forward and backward translations with independent translators, following international guidelines. Four raters rated 200 video-recorded medical student consultations with standardized patients, using the French version of the 4-HCS. We examined the internal consistency, factor structure, construct validity, and reliability of the 4-HCS. RESULTS:The mean overall 4-HCS score was 76.44 (standard deviation, 12.34), with no floor or ceiling effects across subscales. The median rating duration of rating was 8 min (range, 4-19). Cronbach's alpha was 0.94 for the overall 4-HCS, ranging from 0.72 to 0.88 across subscales. In confirmatory factor analysis, goodness-of-fit statistics did not corroborate the hypothesized 4-habit structure. Exploratory factor analysis resulted in two dimensions, with the merging of three conceptually related habits into a single dimension and substantial cross-loading for 15 out of 23 items. Median average absolute-agreement intra-class correlation coefficient estimates were 0.74 (range, 0.68-0.84) and 0.85 (range, 0.76-0.91) for inter- and intra-rater reliability of habit subscales, respectively. CONCLUSION:The French version of the 4-HCS demonstrates satisfactory internal consistency but requires the use of two independent raters to achieve acceptable reliability. The underlying factor structure of the original US version and cross-cultural adaptations of the 4-HCS deserve further investigation.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230672
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexandre Bellier
Philippe Chaffanjon
Edward Krupat
Patrice Francois
José Labarère
spellingShingle Alexandre Bellier
Philippe Chaffanjon
Edward Krupat
Patrice Francois
José Labarère
Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Alexandre Bellier
Philippe Chaffanjon
Edward Krupat
Patrice Francois
José Labarère
author_sort Alexandre Bellier
title Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.
title_short Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.
title_full Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.
title_fullStr Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.
title_full_unstemmed Cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-Habits Coding Scheme into French to assess physician communication skills.
title_sort cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-habits coding scheme into french to assess physician communication skills.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description BACKGROUND:The Four Habits Coding Scheme (4-HCS) is a standardized instrument designed to assess physicians' communication skills from an external rater's perspective, based on video-recorded consultations. OBJECTIVE:To perform the cross-cultural adaptation of the 4-HCS into French and to assess its psychometric properties. METHODS:The 4-HCS was cross-culturally adapted by conducting forward and backward translations with independent translators, following international guidelines. Four raters rated 200 video-recorded medical student consultations with standardized patients, using the French version of the 4-HCS. We examined the internal consistency, factor structure, construct validity, and reliability of the 4-HCS. RESULTS:The mean overall 4-HCS score was 76.44 (standard deviation, 12.34), with no floor or ceiling effects across subscales. The median rating duration of rating was 8 min (range, 4-19). Cronbach's alpha was 0.94 for the overall 4-HCS, ranging from 0.72 to 0.88 across subscales. In confirmatory factor analysis, goodness-of-fit statistics did not corroborate the hypothesized 4-habit structure. Exploratory factor analysis resulted in two dimensions, with the merging of three conceptually related habits into a single dimension and substantial cross-loading for 15 out of 23 items. Median average absolute-agreement intra-class correlation coefficient estimates were 0.74 (range, 0.68-0.84) and 0.85 (range, 0.76-0.91) for inter- and intra-rater reliability of habit subscales, respectively. CONCLUSION:The French version of the 4-HCS demonstrates satisfactory internal consistency but requires the use of two independent raters to achieve acceptable reliability. The underlying factor structure of the original US version and cross-cultural adaptations of the 4-HCS deserve further investigation.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0230672
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