Content Validation of the Dutch Version of the “Older Patients in Acute Care Survey”, an Instrument to Measure the Attitude of Hospital Nurses towards Older Patients (Short Report)

Abstract

Aims and objectives: The aim of this study is to validate the “Older Patients in Acute Care Survey” (OPACS) in the Netherlands. Background: Worldwide the population of older people with multimorbidity increases which results in an increase of older hospitalized patients. Literature shows that nurses have a negative attitude towards older patients. To get insight and improve the attitude of nurses, a validated measurement instrument is needed. The OPACS measures hospital nurses' attitudes towards older patients and has proven good content validity in the USA and good face validity and reliability in Australia. Design: A cross-sectional study. Methods: First the OPACS was translated using forward-backward method and testing clarity of wording with a pilot. Second content validity was determined using “Method Lynn” and clarity of wording and appropriateness for measuring attitude were identified. Results: The OPACS showed acceptable content validity (CVI ≥ 0.78) for 14 items (out of 36) of Section A and 22 items (out of 50) of Section B. The content validity for the entire OPACS was (CVI = 0.62). 89.2% of the participants scored “clear in wording” and 75.6% of the participants qualified the OPACS appropriate for measuring attitude. Conclusions: The OPACS has good clarity of wording and good appropriateness for measuring attitude. The content validity is low which makes the current Dutch version not appropriate for measuring attitude of nurses in Dutch hospitals. Relevance to clinical practice: A measurement instrument to get insight in the attitude of nurses is a first step to improve a negative attitude. A positive attitude of nurses is important to provide good quality of care to the increasing population older people in hospitals. Working with reliable and validated scales is important. This study gives direction to make the OPACS suitable for the Dutch situation.

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Schelven, A. , Dikken, J. , Sillekens, L. , Oldenhuis, D. , Schuurmans, M. and Hoogerduijn, J. (2015) Content Validation of the Dutch Version of the “Older Patients in Acute Care Survey”, an Instrument to Measure the Attitude of Hospital Nurses towards Older Patients. International Journal of Clinical Medicine, 6, 7-18. doi: 10.4236/ijcm.2015.61002.

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1. Introduction

Worldwide, the population of older people is increasing [1] . In the Netherlands, the number of people aged 65 and over is expected to increase from 16% of the population in 2011 to 26% of the population in 2039 [2] . Of these, 20% have two or more chronic diseases which will increase to one in three in the age of 75. In other countries high percentages of multimorbidity are also described [3] - [7] . As a result of aging and multimorbidity, more hospital nurses are confronted with older patients and more nurses are needed to provide in this care of the future [8] [9] .

A lot of nurses have a negative attitude towards older patients [10] [11] . They are more interested in technical specialties such as intensive care, surgery and emergency than in working in geriatrics, which contributes to less popularity of care for older patients [10] - [13] . However, in intensive care, general surgery care and other medical wards, the number of older patients will increase because of aging and multimorbidity, emphasizing the need for nurses who demonstrate a positive attitude towards older patients [5] [6] [8] [9] .

Attitude is described as the way a person thinks about something or someone and is consisted of a behavioral, emotional and cognitive component [14] . The behavioral component implies the intention to behave regarding the attitude object. The emotional component implies a person’s liking or disliking, based on feelings. The cognitive component implies knowledge and value of a phenomenon. These three components influence each other and ultimately determine the attitude of nurses [14] [15] .

The negative attitude towards older patients is caused by the association with deterioration of health, decreased mobility and declining mental state and often a negative experience with older people [16] [17] . Research suggests that there is also a lack of geriatric knowledge. Nurses have insufficiently focused on multiple geriatric health problems among older people. The care of older patients requires a high level of expertise because of multipathology, polypharmacy and behavioral changes [10] [16] -[18] . Ultimately the negative attitude of nurses will have a negative impact on the quality of care and on the quality of life of older patients [12] [18] .

2. Background

To improve the attitude of nurses, healthcare providers first need to understand the current attitude [9] , which can be achieved by measuring attitude using a measurement scale with good clinimetric qualities [19] [20] . In the literature a number of measurement scales are known [12] [21] - [23] . Only one scale, however, measures the behavioral, emotional and cognitive component of attitude. This is the “Older Patients in Acute Care Survey” (OPACS) [9] [11] [21] .

The OPACS consist of two scales. Section A measures practical experience (36 items) and Section B measures general opinions and knowledge of older patient’s needs (50 items). The items in both Sections A and B consist of thirteen different aspects influencing the nursing care of older patients in the hospital: 1) ageist stereotypes; 2) older patients in the acute care setting; 3) ageing-related issues; 4) communication with older patients; 5) admitting an older patient; 6) discharge planning; 7) decision making; 8) medications; 9) pain management; 10) psychological status; 11) hygiene and ADL; 12) continence; and 13) mobility. Items of Section A and B are answered by a five point Likert scale (1 = never and 5 = very frequent) [9] [21] . The OPACS is developed in Australia and validated in the United States. The Australian and United States versions both showed adequate clinimetric qualities. The Australian version showed good face validity and high reliability (Kappa 0.76) [21] . The United States version had a high content validity (CVI 0.92) [9] .

Before the OPACS can be applied in countries other than Australia or the United States, the OPACS should be translated into the language of that country and the validity and reliability of this version of OPACS should be examined. Cultural norms and values play important roles in attitude, and a measurement scale should be validated when it is used in different countries or cultures. Determining the content validity is a critical important first step in this validation process [24] .

The aim of this study is to determine the content validity of the OPACS in the Dutch situation after translation of the measurement scale into the Dutch language.

3. Methods

The study consisted of a two-phase process: translation of OPACS into Dutch, and determining the content validity of OPACS into the Dutch healthcare system setting.

3.1. Translation of OPACS

For translating the OPACS into the Dutch language, the United States version was chosen because the American English usage is more familiar to Dutch translators than Australian English usage. Both Section A and Section B were translated into the Dutch language using the forward-backward translation method (Figure 1) [25] [26] .

Two independent bilingual persons translated the OPACS into the Dutch language. These translations were compared with each other and with the English version of the OPACS and finally determined by two researchers. The Dutch translation was translated back into the English source language by one translator who did not see the original wording. The English back-translation was compared with the first English version to detect possible alterations in meaning. Ambiguities and discrepancies were discussed by two researchers until consensus was achieved.

A pilot among five registered nurses, all working with older patients, was used to test the clarity of wording of all items of the Dutch OPACS using labels 0 = not clear and 1 = clear.

3.2. Validation

The content validity of the OPACS was studied using a cross-sectional design.

3.3. Data Collection

A panel of Dutch experts in geriatric nursing was contacted from the professional network of the two researchers and included teachers, geriatric nurses and geriatric experts from the Geriatric Network of the Dutch Nurses Association. Inclusion criteria were: be able to speak, read and write Dutch, a bachelor degree in nursing, working as a registered nurse in geriatrics for at least five years or worked in a profession that requires knowledge of geriatric nursing for at least five years.

All participants received an invitation letter with extended information, response instructions, the Dutch OPACS and an informed consent form. All respondents, signed and returned the informed consent-form before participating in the study.

Content validity was tested using a score of degree of relevance using a four-point Likert scale (1 = not relevant and 4 = highly relevant) shown in Figure 2 [27] . The clarity of wording and appropriateness for measuring

Figure 1. Method translation. Ambiguities and discrepancies were discussed whereby consensus was achieved.

Figure 2. Method content validation.

attitude was also determined using a two-point Likert scale (0 = not clear/not appropriate and 1 = clear/appropriate).

3.4. Analysis

Data were analyzed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 18.0 [28] .

For the degree of relevance scores the items were dichotomized by summarizing score 1 and 2 (not relevant) and summarizing score 3 and 4 (relevant). The Individual-Content Validity Index (I-CVI) was the result of the scores of one item divided by the number of participants. For an individual question to be considered relevant, its I-CVI should be ≥0.78 [27] . The Scale-Content Validity Index (S-CVI) is the mean of all I-CVI. For the entire scale to be considered relevant, the S-CVI should be ≥0.90 [27] .

Percentage and mean were used for analyzing the variable clarity of wording and variable appropriateness for measuring attitude.

If an expert did not grade a question, the missing value was imputed in two different datasets based on the original database whereby the worst possible score and the best possible score were imputed. Differences between original, worst case and best case database were analyzed with the Kruskal Wallis test to decide if imputation was reliable and which dataset should be used for further analyzing [28] .

4. Results

4.1. Translation of OPACS

Small differences and errors were found between forward and backward translation on 24 (out of 36) items of Section A and 40 (out of 50) items of Section B. Nine (out of 36) items of Section A and six (out of 50) items of Section B were completely corrected. Three (out of 36) items of Section A were unchanged and in Section B four items (out of 50).

All participants of the translation clarity pilot evaluation returned the questionnaire (n = 5) with no missing values. The five participants made 19 suggestions for improvement for Section A and 36 suggestions for Section B. These suggestions included changes in words and sentence structure. The authors adopted 19 of the suggested changes for the first Dutch version of OPACS which was used for content validity.

4.2. Validation

Ten participants were included in the validity portion of the study. Nine participants completed the demographics, one participant completed the questionnaire without completing the demographics section (Table 1). The participant demographic showed that five participants were educated at Master of Science-level. The average length of time working in healthcare was 24 years (SD 8.7; range 9 - 32). Seven participants worked in geriatric nursing and two were lecturers in geriatric nursing.

All missing values of the outcome variables “relevance”, “clarity of wording”, “appropriateness for measuring attitude” were excluded from analyzing because imputation was not relevant: The Kruskal Wallis test showed no significant difference (K ≥ 0.15) which means that there was no difference between the original, the worst case database and best case database.

The degree of relevance for the entire OPACS was S-CVI = 0.62. The score for Section A was S-CVI = 0.61 and the score for Section B was S-CVI = 0.64 (Table 2). Content validity for individual items (I-CVI): 6 items of Section A and 5 items of Section B showed an I-CVI = 1.00. A total of 14 out of 36 items of Section A and 22 of 50 items of Section B showed an I-CVI ≥ 0.78 (Table 3).

Table 1. Demographic characteristics (n = 10).

(n = 9 as result of one missing value); *Mean (SD).

Table 2. Content validity index.

The entire OPACS was scored as clear in wording by 89.20% of the participants. Section A was scored as clear in wording by 92.07% of the participants and section B 87.13% of the participants (Table 4). Two individual items scored low on clarity in wording by ≤30% of the participants.

The entire OPACS was scored as appropriate for measuring attitude by 75.55% of the participants. Section A was scored as appropriate according to 73.64% of the participants and Section B by 76.93% of the participants (Table 3). Eight individual items scored low on appropriateness for measuring attitude by ≤30% of the participants.

Table 3. Items of the OPACS with an acceptable I-CVI.

Table 4. Clarity of wording & appropriateness.

5. Discussion

This study presents the production and validation of a Dutch version of OPACS (see Appendix 1). The pilot showed a good translation of OPACS into Dutch.

Content validity was determined by method Lynn which is commonly used and well described in the literature [27] . According to this method, an optimal content validity should be S-CVI ≥ 0.90. This study did not meet this criterion (S-CVI = 0.62) which means that this version of the Dutch OPACS is not yet adequate for use in the Dutch health care system. However, the entire OPACS scored well on clarity of wording (89.20% of participants) meaning that most items are correctly formulated. The results for appropriateness for measuring attitude were also good for the entire OPACS (75.55% of participants) meaning that experts think that multiple items seem to be adequate for measuring the attitude of nurses. Analysis for the entire scale compared to section A and section B shows the same results.

The results of this study are incongruent with the results of Malmgreen (2009), who found high content validity of the Unites States version of OPACS (entire scale CVI = 0.92; Section A CVI = 0.92; Section B CVI = 0.97). The content validity of the Dutch version of OPACS is low (entire scale CVI = 0.62; Section A CVI = 0.61; Section B CVI = 0.64) when evaluated by Dutch experts in geriatrics. These large differences between the content validity of the English and Dutch versions might be caused by cultural differences between the two settings. The differences between the assessed validity of the two versions could also be caused by the number of participants in each study. Content validity should be assessed by between five and ten participants [27] . This study used ten participants, where Malmgreen (2009) used a smaller number of participants (n = 4). A smaller number of participants increases the coincidence of like-minded outcomes which has an influence on the statistical outcome using method Lynn.

Limitations of this study should be taken into account. During the translation the two researchers discussed many items which showed that certain items were difficult to translate into the Dutch language. The Dutch language does not have sufficient specific and unambiguous words for certain translations such as “I tend to ...” which might be culture related. It also explains the number of changed items and might had an effect on the translation [26] . However, consensus was always achieved. Furthermore both the pilot and the results of this study showed a good translation by showing a good clarity of wording and appropriateness for measuring atti- tude.

6. Conclusion

In this study, the English OPACS was translated into Dutch, resulting in the first non-English version of this instrument measuring the attitude of nurses towards older hospitalized patients. The pilot of the translated OPACS confirmed that is was a good translation from the American-English version. When the instrument was assessed by a panel of Dutch experts in geriatric patients care, the content validity measurement showed a low score for relevance, but a high score for clarity of wording and appropriateness for measuring attitude for the entire scale, Section A and Section B. The current Dutch translation of OPACS does not meet all criteria for good content validity and does not justify the use of this Dutch version of OPACS.

7. Relevance to Clinical Practice

Measuring attitude of nurses is important to provide good quality of care to the increasing population of older hospitalized patients. Only with a good attitude it is possible that the care of nurses will meet the nursing needs of older patients. That is why the attitude of nurses should be measured. In this process, it is important to work with reliable and valid measurement scales. This study shows that the Dutch version of OPACS is not yet applicable for clinical practice, however, it is promising. This study gives an overall direction to optimize and improve the content of OPACS. Further research is necessary to determine the most appropriate items to measure the cognitive, emotional and behavioral component of attitude of nurses towards older patients in the Dutch setting. Finally, future research should be focusing on further assessing the validity and reliability of the improved version of the Dutch OPACS.

Contributions

AvS, MS and JH conceived the original idea for the study. AvS, LS, DO and JH designed the study protocol. AvS and JH executed the study and executed the statistical analyses. All authors were involved in interpreting the data. AvS, JD and JH drafted the manuscript; all other authors read the manuscript critically for important intellectual content.

Acknowledgements

We thank Drs. C. L. J. J. Kruitwagen for his statistical help and advice during the study.

Appendix 1 Dutch Version of OPACS (OPACS NL)

OPACS Deel A: Praktische Ervaringen.

OPACS Deel B: Algemene Opvattingen.

NOTES

*Corresponding author.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

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