Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for Counselors

This study provides the development phases and initial psychometric evaluation of the Integrated Care Competency Scale (ICCS) with sample ( n = 243). Specifically, quantitative methods with graduate counseling students were used in this study. The ICCS through a three-phase study process was honed t...

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Main Authors: Bridget Asempapa, Reuben S. Asempapa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-08-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244019870782
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spelling doaj-af1b486fd50a48f1b1c0029998538d932020-11-25T03:56:36ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402019-08-01910.1177/2158244019870782Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for CounselorsBridget Asempapa0Reuben S. Asempapa1West Chester University, West Chester, PA, USAPenn State Harrisburg, Middletown, PA, USAThis study provides the development phases and initial psychometric evaluation of the Integrated Care Competency Scale (ICCS) with sample ( n = 243). Specifically, quantitative methods with graduate counseling students were used in this study. The ICCS through a three-phase study process was honed to 65 items and broadly assesses graduate counseling students’ perceived competencies in integrated care. Phase 1 reports on item generation and issues related to content validity, Phase 2 describes the results of a pilot study and preliminary psychometric properties, and Phase 3 discusses the exploratory factor analysis, and further psychometric properties conducted to assess the usefulness and reliability of the ICCS items. Results from the three-phase study process revealed satisfactory reliability, factor structure, and usefulness of the newly constructed ICCS in measuring integrated care competencies. Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for the overall scale was .98. Discussion, limitation, and implications for future research are presented.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244019870782
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bridget Asempapa
Reuben S. Asempapa
spellingShingle Bridget Asempapa
Reuben S. Asempapa
Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for Counselors
SAGE Open
author_facet Bridget Asempapa
Reuben S. Asempapa
author_sort Bridget Asempapa
title Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for Counselors
title_short Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for Counselors
title_full Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for Counselors
title_fullStr Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for Counselors
title_full_unstemmed Development and Initial Psychometric Properties of the Integrated Care Competency Scale for Counselors
title_sort development and initial psychometric properties of the integrated care competency scale for counselors
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2019-08-01
description This study provides the development phases and initial psychometric evaluation of the Integrated Care Competency Scale (ICCS) with sample ( n = 243). Specifically, quantitative methods with graduate counseling students were used in this study. The ICCS through a three-phase study process was honed to 65 items and broadly assesses graduate counseling students’ perceived competencies in integrated care. Phase 1 reports on item generation and issues related to content validity, Phase 2 describes the results of a pilot study and preliminary psychometric properties, and Phase 3 discusses the exploratory factor analysis, and further psychometric properties conducted to assess the usefulness and reliability of the ICCS items. Results from the three-phase study process revealed satisfactory reliability, factor structure, and usefulness of the newly constructed ICCS in measuring integrated care competencies. Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for the overall scale was .98. Discussion, limitation, and implications for future research are presented.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244019870782
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