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Development of an instrument to determine competencies of postgraduate ICU nurses in Cyprus
Author(s) -
Hadjibalassi Maria,
Papastavrou Evridiki,
Lambrinou Ekaterini,
Tsangari Haritini,
Athini Evdokia,
Georgiou Evanthia,
Nicolaou Elisavet,
Merkouris Anastasios
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
nursing in critical care
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.689
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1478-5153
pISSN - 1362-1017
DOI - 10.1111/j.1478-5153.2012.00503.x
Subject(s) - cronbach's alpha , likert scale , nursing , construct validity , critical care nursing , psychology , focus group , medical education , scale (ratio) , curriculum , medicine , qualitative research , construct (python library) , intensive care unit , psychometrics , health care , patient satisfaction , pedagogy , clinical psychology , social science , psychiatry , business , economic growth , sociology , computer science , developmental psychology , marketing , quantum mechanics , programming language , physics , economics
Aims and objectives: The study sought to explore the expected competencies for postgraduate intensive care unit nurses aiming to develop a future competency‐based curriculum. The aim of this part of the study is to develop a new instrument to determine what competencies are expected of postgraduate critical care nurses. Background: Despite existing competency frameworks that emerged from research in the area of critical care, globally and within countries there is diversity and an ongoing debate regarding level of critical care education, outcomes and competencies acquired. Design and methods: A combination of qualitative and quantitative approach was used. In first stage (qualitative), focus groups and interviews were used aiming to explore critical care nurses views concerning expected competencies of postgraduate critical care nurses. In second stage (quantitative), an 81 items Likert scale questionnaire, which was designed based on qualitative data and literature, was distributed among critical care nurses in Cyprus (n: 234, response rate 66%) aiming to receive feedback from clinical nurses and validate the instrument. Psychometric approaches such as internal consistency reliability using Cronbach's α and construct validity were used to validate the instrument. Results: The final questionnaire includes 72 items and has a four‐dimensional structure. The four dimensions are (1) leadership/management and professional development, (2) decision‐making and management of emergencies, (3) provision of care and professional practice and (4) ethical practice. All factors were highly reliable, with Cronbach's α ranging from 0·895 to 0·974. Conclusions: A new instrument to determine what competencies are expected of postgraduate critical care nurses was generated from this study. A new framework of competencies is grounded on this study that addresses the holistic, individualized and ethically informed quality care of critically ill and may inform educational strategies. Relevance to clinical practice: Critical care nurses competencies need to be determined for quality care and speciality development.

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