Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients with a stroke often cannot care for themselves after hospital discharge. Assessment of their self-care ability is the first step in planning post-discharge home care. This study aimed to design and validate a measure of perceived self-care ability (PSCA) in stroke patients.
Methods
A sequential-exploratory mixed method was conducted in Tehran, Iran, in 2020–2021. The qualitative phase involved in-depth semi-structured interviews with 12 participants. Transcripts were content analyzed. The results guided the development of 81 items. psychometric properties such as face validity (Impact Score > 1.5), content validity ratio (CVR > 0.63), content validity index (Item Content Validity Index: ICVI > 0.78, Scale Content Validity Index/Average: SCVI/Ave > 0.8) and Kappa value (Kappa > 0.7), internal consistency (Cronbach’s alpha > 0.7), relative reliability (ICC: inter class correlation coefficient), absolute reliability (Standard Error of Measurement: SEM and Minimal Detectable Changes: MDC), convergent validity (Correlation Coefficient between 0.4–0.7), interpretability, responsiveness, feasibility, and ceiling and floor effects were assessed.
Results
Content analysis of the qualitative interviews yielded 5 major categories and 9 subcategories that reflected "Perceptual stability", "Cognitive fluctuations", "Sensory, Motor and Physical health",” The subjective nature" and "The dynamic nature” of PSCA. Results of face and content validity reduced the number of items to 32, capturing three dimensions of PSCA in chronic stroke patients; these dimensions included perceptual ability, threatened health status, and sensory, motor, and cognitive ability. The findings supported the reliability and validity of the measure.
Conclusions
The PSCA questionnaire was developed and validated within the Iranian culture. It is useful in assessing the self-care of patients with stroke and in informing practice.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference41 articles.
1. Dalvandi A, Khankeh H, Bahrampouri S, Ebadi A, Passandeh H, Sari HN, et al. Designing Iranian pre-hospital stroke scale. Med J Islam Repub Iran. 2014;28:118.
2. Stroke Facts 2020. Cited 2022. Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/stroke/facts.htm#print.
3. Fiouji H, Namayandeh SM, jam Barsang S, Erfani M. Epidemiologic Study of the Main Risk Factors for one Year Ischemic Stroke and Surivial in Patients admitted to the neurology department of Ghayim Hospital in Mashhad, Iran, 2015. J Tolooebehdasht. 2020.
4. Virani SS, Alonso A, Aparicio HJ, Benjamin EJ, Bittencourt MS, Callaway CW, et al. Heart disease and stroke statistics—2021 update. Circulation. 2021;143(8):e254–743.
5. Grant JS, Glandon GL, Elliott TR, Giger JN, Weaver M. Caregiving problems and feelings experienced by family caregivers of stroke survivors the first month after discharge. Int J Rehabil Res. 2004;27(2):105–11.