Development and initial testing of a Health Confidence Score (HCS).
attitudes
healthcare quality improvement
patient-centred care
quality measurement
surveys
Journal
BMJ open quality
ISSN: 2399-6641
Titre abrégé: BMJ Open Qual
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101710381
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
2019
2019
Historique:
received:
20
04
2018
revised:
17
05
2019
accepted:
26
05
2019
entrez:
2
7
2019
pubmed:
2
7
2019
medline:
2
7
2019
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Patients need to feel confident about looking after their own health. This is needed to improve patient outcomes and clinical support. With few suitable tools available to measure self-care health confidence, we developed and validated a short, generic survey instrument for use in evaluation and quality improvement. The Health Confidence Score (HCS) was developed through literature review, patient and expert focus groups and discussions. This paper reports an initial survey (n = 1031, study 1) which identified some issues and a further face-to-face survey (n = 378, study 2) to test the construct and concurrent validity of the final version. Scores were correlated against the My Health Confidence (MHC) rating scale, howRu (health status measure) and relevant demographics. The HCS is short (50 words) with good readability (reading age 8). It has four items covering health knowledge, capability to self-manage, access to help and shared decision-making; each has four response options (strongly agree, agree, neutral disagree). Items are reported independently and as a summary score.The mean summary score was 76.7 (SD 20.4) on 0-100 scale. Cronbach's alpha = 0.82. Exploratory factor analysis suggested that the four items relate to a single dimension. Correlation of the HCS summary score with MHC was high (Spearman r = 0.76). It was also associated with health status (Spearman r = 0.49), negatively with number of medications taken (r=-0.29) and age (r=-0.22) and not with ethnicity, having children or education level. The HCS is short, easy to use, with good psychometric properties and construct validity. Each item is meaningful independently and the summary score gives an overall picture of health confidence.
Identifiants
pubmed: 31259277
doi: 10.1136/bmjoq-2018-000411
pii: bmjoq-2018-000411
pmc: PMC6568167
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Pagination
e000411Subventions
Organisme : Wellcome Trust
Pays : United Kingdom
Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts
Competing interests: TB is a director and shareholder in R-Outcomes Ltd, which provides quality improvement and evaluation services using the Health Confidence Score. HWWP has received consultancy fees from Crystallise, System Analytic and The HELP Trust and received funding from myownteam and Shift.ms, unrelated to the work reported here. CB is a non-executive director of AKARI Care Homes, FINCCH and Invatech Health. The authors declare that they have no other conflicting interests. Please contact R-Outcomes Ltd if you wish to use the Health Confidence Score.
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