Validation of Two Instruments for the Measurement of Dehumanization and Self-Dehumanization in Healthcare Settings

Author:

Roupa Aikaterini1,Patelarou Athina1ORCID,Fradelos Evangelos C.2ORCID,Fousiani Kyriaki3,Miliaraki Marianna4,Giakoumidakis Konstantinos1ORCID,Patelarou Evridiki1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nursing, School of Health Sciences, Hellenic Mediterranean University, 71410 Heraklion, Greece

2. Department of Nursing, School of Health Sciences, University of Thessaly, 41500 Larisa, Greece

3. Department of Psychology, University of Groningen, 9712 Groningen, The Netherlands

4. Pediatric Intensive Care Unit, School of Medicine, University of Crete, 70013 Heraklion, Greece

Abstract

Understanding and addressing dehumanization in healthcare is crucial due to its profound impact on patient care, ethical implications on patient dignity and autonomy, and its potential to affect the psychological well-being of healthcare professionals. The primary aim of this study was to establish reliable and valid instruments measuring two different types of dehumanization, namely animalistic dehumanization (i.e., stripping one of their uniquely human characteristics) and mechanistic dehumanization (i.e., stripping one of their human nature characteristics) among healthcare professionals. In this cross-sectional validation study among healthcare professionals, we tested measures of both animalistic and mechanistic dehumanization, focusing on the dehumanization of patients (hetero-dehumanization) and oneself (self-dehumanization), respectively. All measures were developed and validated based on a concept analysis, a literature review, and an appraisal of pre-existing scales. The research was conducted among 400 nurses and medical doctors employed in Greek public hospitals. Coefficient validity ratio results showed that 100% of items were acceptable for both measures. The newly established and validated hetero-dehumanization scale encompassed two factors (factor 1: animalistic dehumanization, factor 2: mechanistic dehumanization; Cronbach’s alpha was equal to 0.86 for each measure). The self-dehumanization scale was a mono-factorial measure of mechanistic dehumanization (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.97). Two validated measures of (self- and hetero-) animalistic and mechanistic dehumanization measures were developed for the assessment of dehumanization among health professionals, which will form the basis for future research in this important scientific field.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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