Psychometric validation of the Cardiac Rehabilitation Barriers Scale

Author:

Shanmugasegaram Shamila1,Gagliese Lucia123,Oh Paul34,Stewart Donna E23,Brister Stephanie J23,Chan Victoria5,Grace Sherry L12345

Affiliation:

1. York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. University Health Network, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine, Medical Sciences Building, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

4. Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

5. York Central Hospital, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Objective: The purpose of this study was to investigate the factor structure and psychometric properties of the Cardiac Rehabilitation Barriers Scale (CRBS). Design, setting, and participants: In total, 2636 cardiac inpatients from 11 hospitals completed a survey. One year later, participants completed a follow-up survey, which included the CRBS. A subsample of patients also completed a third survey which included the CRBS, the Cardiac Rehabilitation Enrolment Obstacles scale, and the Beliefs About Cardiac Rehabilitation scale three weeks later. The CRBS asked participants to rate 21 cardiac rehabilitation barriers on a five-point Likert scale regardless of cardiac rehabilitation referral or enrolment. Results: Maximum likelihood factor analysis with oblique rotation resulted in a four-factor solution: perceived need/healthcare factors (eigenvalue = 6.13, Cronbach’s α = .89), logistical factors (eigenvalue = 5.83, Cronbach’s α = .88), work/time conflicts (eigenvalue = 3.78, Cronbach’s α = .71), and comorbidities/functional status (eigenvalue = 4.85, Cronbach’s α = .83). Mean total perceived barriers were significantly greater among non-enrollees than cardiac rehabilitation enrollees ( P < .001). Convergent validity with the Beliefs About Cardiac Rehabilitation and Cardiac Rehabilitation Enrolment Obstacles scales was also demonstrated. Test-retest reliability of the CRBS was acceptable (intraclass correlation coefficient = .64). Conclusion: The CRBS consists of four subscales and has sound psychometric properties. The extent to which identified barriers can be addressed to facilitate greater cardiac rehabilitation utilization warrants future study.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Rehabilitation,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation

Reference27 articles.

1. Cardiac Care Network of Ontario. The Ontario cardiac rehabilitation pilot project: Report and recommendations. Toronto, Ontario: Cardiac Care Network of Ontario, 2002.

2. Exercise-based rehabilitation for patients with coronary heart disease: systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials

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4. Cardiac rehabilitation: under‐referral and underutilisation

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