Healthcare (Aug 2024)

Development and Psychometric Evaluation of the End-of-Life Nursing Competency Scale for Clinical Nurses

  • Ji-yeon Kim,
  • Hyun-sun Kim,
  • Mi-jung Kang,
  • Hee-young Oh,
  • Mi-rae Jo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12161580
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 16
p. 1580

Abstract

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This study aimed to develop and establish psychometric properties of the End-of-Life Nursing Competency Scale for Clinical Nurses. The initial items were derived from an in-depth literature review and field interviews. The content validation of these items was assessed over three rounds by experts in end-of-life nursing care. The study included 437 clinical nurses from four hospitals in S, E, and D cities in South Korea. The final exploratory factor analysis resulted in a scale consisting of 21 items with the following five factors that explained 68.44% of the total variance: Physical care—imminent end-of-life, legal and administrative processes, psychological care—patient and family, psychological care—nurses’ self, and ethical nursing. The final model with these five subscales was validated through confirmatory factor analysis. Both item convergent-discriminant validity and known-group validity, which compared two groups based on clinical experience (p p < 0.008), were satisfactory. The internal consistency, as measured by Cronbach’s α, ranged from 0.62 to 0.89 for the subscales and was 0.91 for the total scale. This scale has been validated as a reliable and effective instrument for clinical nurses to self-assess their end-of-life nursing competencies in a clinical setting.

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