The measurement scale of resilience among family caregivers of children with cancer: a psychometric evaluation.
Adolescent
Adult
Caregivers
/ psychology
Child
Child, Preschool
Cross-Sectional Studies
Factor Analysis, Statistical
Female
Humans
Infant
Male
Mexico
Middle Aged
Neoplasms
/ psychology
Parents
/ psychology
Psychometrics
Reproducibility of Results
Resilience, Psychological
Surveys and Questionnaires
Young Adult
CFA
Childhood cancer
Family caregivers
Psychometric properties
Reliability
Resilience
Social desirability
Validity
Journal
BMC public health
ISSN: 1471-2458
Titre abrégé: BMC Public Health
Pays: England
ID NLM: 100968562
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
27 Aug 2019
27 Aug 2019
Historique:
received:
21
01
2019
accepted:
18
08
2019
entrez:
29
8
2019
pubmed:
29
8
2019
medline:
27
11
2019
Statut:
epublish
Résumé
Resilience to disease is a process of positive adaptation despite the loss of health, it involves the development of vitality and skills to overcome the negative effects of adversity, risks, and vulnerability caused by disease. In Mexico, cancer is the leading cause of death in children. Both the diagnosis and the treatment of childhood cancer affect the health of family caregivers. However, resilience is a personality trait that can be protective in these situations. Therefore, resilience is an important psychological construct to measure, evaluate and develop in specific populations and contexts. In Mexico, a scale to assess this trait has been developed. This study aimed to test the reliability and factor structure of the Mexican Measurement Scale of Resilience (RESI-M), describe its distribution, evaluate its relationship with sociodemographic variables, and verify its concurrent validity with psychological well-being, depression, anxiety and parental stress and its independence from social desirability. A cross-sectional study was conducted involving an intentional nonprobability sample of 330 family caregivers of children with cancer hospitalized at the National Institute of Health in Mexico City. The participants responded to a sociodemographic variables questionnaire, the Mexican Measurement Scale of Resilience RESI-M, and five other assessment scales. Overall internal consistency was very high (ordinal alpha = .976). The confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated that the five-factor model had a close fit to the data: NFI = .970, CFI = .997, SRMR = .055, and RMSEA = .019. The distributions of the RESI-M total score followed a normal distribution. The RESI-M total score correlated positively with psychological well-being and negatively with depression, parental stress and anxiety. The overall RESI-M total score also correlated positively with age, but there was no difference in means between women and men. Resilience was independent of social desirability. The RESI-M shows reliability and construct validity in family caregivers of children with cancer and does not show a bias in relation to social desirability.
Sections du résumé
BACKGROUND
BACKGROUND
Resilience to disease is a process of positive adaptation despite the loss of health, it involves the development of vitality and skills to overcome the negative effects of adversity, risks, and vulnerability caused by disease. In Mexico, cancer is the leading cause of death in children. Both the diagnosis and the treatment of childhood cancer affect the health of family caregivers. However, resilience is a personality trait that can be protective in these situations. Therefore, resilience is an important psychological construct to measure, evaluate and develop in specific populations and contexts. In Mexico, a scale to assess this trait has been developed. This study aimed to test the reliability and factor structure of the Mexican Measurement Scale of Resilience (RESI-M), describe its distribution, evaluate its relationship with sociodemographic variables, and verify its concurrent validity with psychological well-being, depression, anxiety and parental stress and its independence from social desirability.
METHODS
METHODS
A cross-sectional study was conducted involving an intentional nonprobability sample of 330 family caregivers of children with cancer hospitalized at the National Institute of Health in Mexico City. The participants responded to a sociodemographic variables questionnaire, the Mexican Measurement Scale of Resilience RESI-M, and five other assessment scales.
RESULTS
RESULTS
Overall internal consistency was very high (ordinal alpha = .976). The confirmatory factor analysis demonstrated that the five-factor model had a close fit to the data: NFI = .970, CFI = .997, SRMR = .055, and RMSEA = .019. The distributions of the RESI-M total score followed a normal distribution. The RESI-M total score correlated positively with psychological well-being and negatively with depression, parental stress and anxiety. The overall RESI-M total score also correlated positively with age, but there was no difference in means between women and men. Resilience was independent of social desirability.
CONCLUSIONS
CONCLUSIONS
The RESI-M shows reliability and construct validity in family caregivers of children with cancer and does not show a bias in relation to social desirability.
Identifiants
pubmed: 31455340
doi: 10.1186/s12889-019-7512-8
pii: 10.1186/s12889-019-7512-8
pmc: PMC6712960
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM
Pagination
1164Subventions
Organisme : Measurement and assessment of resilience in pediatric chronic disease.
ID : HIM/2013/019/SSA.1141
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