Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive care

Objective To develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of a scale measuring patient safety during the intrahospital transport process for intensive care.Design The scale was developed based on a theoretical model of the work system and patient safety, and items generated from participant obse...

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Main Authors: Lina Bergman, Wendy Chaboyer, Monica Pettersson, Mona Ringdal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2020-10-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/10/e038424.full
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spelling doaj-f4ad14bab2c842bc9b3cd43bd7d27dbd2021-05-06T09:32:54ZengBMJ Publishing GroupBMJ Open2044-60552020-10-01101010.1136/bmjopen-2020-038424Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive careLina Bergman0Wendy Chaboyer1Monica Pettersson2Mona Ringdal3Institute of Health and Care Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, SwedenMenzies Health Institute Queensland, G40 Griffith Health Centre, Level 8.86, Gold Coast campus, Griffith University QLD 4222, Gold Coast, Queensland, AustraliaInstitute of Health and Care Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, SwedenInstitute of Health and Care Sciences, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, SwedenObjective To develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of a scale measuring patient safety during the intrahospital transport process for intensive care.Design The scale was developed based on a theoretical model of the work system and patient safety, and items generated from participant observations. A Delphi study with international experts was used to establish content validity. Next, a cross-sectional study was undertaken to inform item reduction and evaluate construct validity and internal consistency.Setting The questionnaire was distributed to healthcare practitioners at 12 intensive care units in Sweden.Participants A total of 315 questionnaires were completed. Eligible participants were healthcare practitioners in the included units that performed an intrahospital transport during the study period. Inclusion criteria were (1) transports of patients within the hospital to undergo an examination or intervention, and (2) transports performed by staff from the intensive care unit. We excluded transports to a step-down unit or hospital ward.Outcome measures Psychometric evaluation, including item analysis, validity and reliability testing.Results Items were reduced from 55 to 24, informed by distributional statistics, initial reliabilities, factor loadings and communalities. The final factor model consisted of five factors, accounting for 59% of variance. All items loaded significantly on only one factor (>0.35). The original conceptual model of teamwork, transport-related tasks, tools and technologies, environment, and organisation was maintained with regrouping of items. Cronbach’s alpha ranged from 0.72 to 0.82 for each subscale (ie, factor).Conclusions The present study provides a self-report questionnaire to assess patient safety during intrahospital transport of patients in intensive care. The results indicate acceptable validity and reliability of the scale among a sample of Swedish healthcare practitioners. If further confirmatory testing supports the present results, this scale could be a useful tool to better understand safety prerequisites and improve clinical practice.https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/10/e038424.full
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lina Bergman
Wendy Chaboyer
Monica Pettersson
Mona Ringdal
spellingShingle Lina Bergman
Wendy Chaboyer
Monica Pettersson
Mona Ringdal
Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive care
BMJ Open
author_facet Lina Bergman
Wendy Chaboyer
Monica Pettersson
Mona Ringdal
author_sort Lina Bergman
title Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive care
title_short Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive care
title_full Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive care
title_fullStr Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive care
title_full_unstemmed Development and initial psychometric testing of the Intrahospital Transport Safety Scale in intensive care
title_sort development and initial psychometric testing of the intrahospital transport safety scale in intensive care
publisher BMJ Publishing Group
series BMJ Open
issn 2044-6055
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Objective To develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of a scale measuring patient safety during the intrahospital transport process for intensive care.Design The scale was developed based on a theoretical model of the work system and patient safety, and items generated from participant observations. A Delphi study with international experts was used to establish content validity. Next, a cross-sectional study was undertaken to inform item reduction and evaluate construct validity and internal consistency.Setting The questionnaire was distributed to healthcare practitioners at 12 intensive care units in Sweden.Participants A total of 315 questionnaires were completed. Eligible participants were healthcare practitioners in the included units that performed an intrahospital transport during the study period. Inclusion criteria were (1) transports of patients within the hospital to undergo an examination or intervention, and (2) transports performed by staff from the intensive care unit. We excluded transports to a step-down unit or hospital ward.Outcome measures Psychometric evaluation, including item analysis, validity and reliability testing.Results Items were reduced from 55 to 24, informed by distributional statistics, initial reliabilities, factor loadings and communalities. The final factor model consisted of five factors, accounting for 59% of variance. All items loaded significantly on only one factor (>0.35). The original conceptual model of teamwork, transport-related tasks, tools and technologies, environment, and organisation was maintained with regrouping of items. Cronbach’s alpha ranged from 0.72 to 0.82 for each subscale (ie, factor).Conclusions The present study provides a self-report questionnaire to assess patient safety during intrahospital transport of patients in intensive care. The results indicate acceptable validity and reliability of the scale among a sample of Swedish healthcare practitioners. If further confirmatory testing supports the present results, this scale could be a useful tool to better understand safety prerequisites and improve clinical practice.
url https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/10/10/e038424.full
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