학술논문

Measuring Advance Care Planning: Optimizing the Advance Care Planning Engagement Survey.
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of pain and symptom management. 53(4)
Subject
Humans
Factor Analysis
Statistical
Cross-Sectional Studies
Reproducibility of Results
Psychometrics
Aged
Middle Aged
Patient Participation
Advance Care Planning
Canada
United States
Female
Male
Surveys and Questionnaires
Advance care planning
psychometrics
surveys and questionnaires
Factor Analysis
Statistical
Anesthesiology
Medical and Health Sciences
Language
Abstract
ContextA validated 82-item Advance Care Planning (ACP) Engagement Survey measures a broad range of behaviors. However, concise surveys are needed.ObjectivesThe objective of this study was to validate shorter versions of the survey.MethodsThe survey included 57 process (e.g., readiness) and 25 action items (e.g., discussions). For item reduction, we systematically eliminated questions based on face validity, item nonresponse, redundancy, ceiling effects, and factor analysis. We assessed internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) and construct validity with cross-sectional correlations and the ability of the progressively shorter survey versions to detect change one week after exposure to an ACP intervention (Pearson correlation coefficients).ResultsFive hundred one participants (four Canadian and three US sites) were included in item reduction (mean age 69 years [±10], 41% nonwhite). Because of high correlations between readiness and action items, all action items were removed. Because of high correlations and ceiling effects, two process items were removed. Successive factor analysis then created 55-, 34-, 15-, nine-, and four-item versions; 664 participants (from three US ACP clinical trials) were included in validity analysis (age 65 years [±8], 72% nonwhite, 34% Spanish speaking). Cronbach's alphas were high for all versions (four items 0.84-55 items 0.97). Compared with the original survey, cross-sectional correlations were high (four items 0.85; 55 items 0.97) as were delta correlations (four items 0.68; 55 items 0.93).ConclusionShorter versions of the ACP Engagement Survey are valid, internally consistent, and able to detect change across a broad range of ACP behaviors for English and Spanish speakers. Shorter ACP surveys can efficiently measure broad ACP behaviors in research and clinical settings.