End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaire

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Practices for withholding or withdrawing therapy vary according to professional, cultural and religious differences. No Danish-validated questionnaire examining withholding and withdrawing practices exists, thus the aim of this study...

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Main Authors: Jensen Hanne, Ammentorp Jette, Erlandsen Mogens, Ørding Helle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2012-08-01
Series:BMC Anesthesiology
Online Access:http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2253/12/16
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spelling doaj-b8ed802445924725a4e34f2e0122fee42020-11-25T03:49:25ZengBMCBMC Anesthesiology1471-22532012-08-011211610.1186/1471-2253-12-16End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaireJensen HanneAmmentorp JetteErlandsen MogensØrding Helle<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Practices for withholding or withdrawing therapy vary according to professional, cultural and religious differences. No Danish-validated questionnaire examining withholding and withdrawing practices exists, thus the aim of this study was to develop and validate a questionnaire for surveying the views of intensive care nurses, intensivists, and primary physicians regarding collaboration and other aspects of withholding and withdrawing therapy in the ICU.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A questionnaire was developed on the basis of literature, focus group interviews with intensive care nurses and intensivists, and individual interviews with primary physicians. The questionnaire was validated in the following 3 phases: a qualitative test with 17 participants; a quantitative pilot test with 60 participants; and a survey with 776 participants. The validation process included tests for face and content validity (by interviewing participants in the qualitative part of the pilot study), reliability (by assessing the distribution of responses within the individual response categories), agreement (by conducting a test-retest, evaluated by paired analyses), known groups’ validity (as a surrogate test for responsiveness, by comparing two ICUs with a known difference in end-of-life practices), floor and ceiling effect, and missing data.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Face and content validity were assessed as good by the participants in the qualitative pilot test; all considered the questions relevant and none of the participants found areas lacking. Almost all response categories were used by the participants, thus demonstrating the questionnaires ability to distinguish between different respondents, agreement was fair (the average test-retest agreement for the Likert scale responses was 0.54 (weighted kappa; range, 0.25-0.73), and known groups’ validity was proved by finding significant differences in level of satisfaction with interdisciplinary collaboration and in experiences of withdrawal decisions being unnecessarily postponed. Floor and ceiling effect was in accordance with other questionnaires, and missing data was limited to a range of 0-7% for all questions.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The validation showed good and fair areas of validity of the questionnaire. The questionnaire is considered a useful tool to assess the perceptions of collaboration and other aspects of withholding and withdrawing therapy practices in Danish ICUs amongst nurses, intensivists, and primary physicians.</p> http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2253/12/16
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jensen Hanne
Ammentorp Jette
Erlandsen Mogens
Ørding Helle
spellingShingle Jensen Hanne
Ammentorp Jette
Erlandsen Mogens
Ørding Helle
End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaire
BMC Anesthesiology
author_facet Jensen Hanne
Ammentorp Jette
Erlandsen Mogens
Ørding Helle
author_sort Jensen Hanne
title End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaire
title_short End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaire
title_full End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaire
title_fullStr End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaire
title_full_unstemmed End-of-life practices in Danish ICUs: development and validation of a questionnaire
title_sort end-of-life practices in danish icus: development and validation of a questionnaire
publisher BMC
series BMC Anesthesiology
issn 1471-2253
publishDate 2012-08-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Practices for withholding or withdrawing therapy vary according to professional, cultural and religious differences. No Danish-validated questionnaire examining withholding and withdrawing practices exists, thus the aim of this study was to develop and validate a questionnaire for surveying the views of intensive care nurses, intensivists, and primary physicians regarding collaboration and other aspects of withholding and withdrawing therapy in the ICU.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>A questionnaire was developed on the basis of literature, focus group interviews with intensive care nurses and intensivists, and individual interviews with primary physicians. The questionnaire was validated in the following 3 phases: a qualitative test with 17 participants; a quantitative pilot test with 60 participants; and a survey with 776 participants. The validation process included tests for face and content validity (by interviewing participants in the qualitative part of the pilot study), reliability (by assessing the distribution of responses within the individual response categories), agreement (by conducting a test-retest, evaluated by paired analyses), known groups’ validity (as a surrogate test for responsiveness, by comparing two ICUs with a known difference in end-of-life practices), floor and ceiling effect, and missing data.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Face and content validity were assessed as good by the participants in the qualitative pilot test; all considered the questions relevant and none of the participants found areas lacking. Almost all response categories were used by the participants, thus demonstrating the questionnaires ability to distinguish between different respondents, agreement was fair (the average test-retest agreement for the Likert scale responses was 0.54 (weighted kappa; range, 0.25-0.73), and known groups’ validity was proved by finding significant differences in level of satisfaction with interdisciplinary collaboration and in experiences of withdrawal decisions being unnecessarily postponed. Floor and ceiling effect was in accordance with other questionnaires, and missing data was limited to a range of 0-7% for all questions.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>The validation showed good and fair areas of validity of the questionnaire. The questionnaire is considered a useful tool to assess the perceptions of collaboration and other aspects of withholding and withdrawing therapy practices in Danish ICUs amongst nurses, intensivists, and primary physicians.</p>
url http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2253/12/16
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