Nurses' evidence‐based knowledge and self‐efficacy in venous access device insertion and management: Development and validation of a questionnaire

Author:

Piredda Michela12ORCID,Sguanci Marco1,De Maria Maddalena3,Petrucci Giorgia4,Usai Matteo5,Fiorini Jacopo6,De Marinis Maria Grazia12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine and Surgery, Research Unit Nursing Science Campus Bio‐Medico di Roma University Rome Italy

2. Department of Medicine and Surgery, Research Unit Nursing in Palliative Care Fondazione Policlinico Universitario Campus Bio‐Medico Rome Italy

3. Department of Life Health Sciences and Health Professions Link Campus University Rome Italy

4. Research Unit of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, Department of Medicine and Surgery Università Campus Bio‐Medico di Roma Rome Italy

5. Department of Biomedicine and Prevention Tor Vergata University Rome Italy

6. Department of Nursing Professions University Hospital of Tor Vergata Rome Italy

Abstract

AbstractAimTo develop and psychometrically test an instrument to assess nurses' evidence‐based knowledge and self‐efficacy regarding insertion and management of venous access devices (short peripheral catheter (SPC), long peripheral catheter/midline (LPC) and PICC) and the management of totally implantable central venous catheter (Port) in adult patients.DesignMulticenter cross‐sectional observational study with questionnaire development and psychometric testing (validity and reliability).MethodsAn evidence‐based instrument was developed including a 34‐item knowledge section and an 81‐item self‐efficacy section including four device‐specific parts. Nineteen experts evaluated content validity. A pilot study was conducted with 86 nurses. Difficulty and discrimination indices were calculated for knowledge items. Confirmatory factor analyses tested the dimensionality of the self‐efficacy section according to the development model. Construct validity was tested through known group validity. Reliability was evaluated through Cronbach's alpha coefficient for unidimensional scales and omega coefficients for multidimensional scales.ResultsContent validity indices and results from the pilot study were excellent with all the item‐content validity indices >0.78 and scale‐content validity index ranging from 0.96 to 0.99. The survey was completed by 425 nurses. Difficulty and discrimination indices for knowledge items were acceptable with most items (58.8%) showing desirable difficulty and most items (58.8%) with excellent (35.3%) or good (23.5%) discrimination power, and appropriate to the content. The dimensionality of the model posited for self‐efficacy was confirmed with adequate fit indices (e.g., comparative fit index range 0.984–0.996, root mean square error of approximation range 0.054–0.073). Construct validity was determined and reliability was excellent with alpha values ranging from 0.843 to 0.946 and omega coefficients ranging from 0.833 to 0.933. Therefore, a valid and reliable tool based on updated guidelines is made available to evaluate nurses’ competencies for venous access insertion and management.

Publisher

Wiley

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