1. Developing and Psychometric Testing a Health Care Transition Service Measure in the National Survey of Children's Health.
- Author
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Cheak-Zamora N, Golzy M, Mandy T, and Deroche C
- Subjects
- Child, Adolescent, Humans, Child Health, Psychometrics, Reproducibility of Results, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Surveys and Questionnaires, Patient Transfer, Transition to Adult Care
- Abstract
Objective: Access to health care transition (HCT) services has been included in national surveys for 20 years. While dozens of studies have assessed HCT, no study has examined the model fit of the HCT questions or psychometric properties of the measure. We utilized National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH) data to develop and test a comprehensive HCT measure., Methods: We utilized NSCH data (2016-19) to examine the model fit of 9 HCT questions. The new measure's psychometric properties were assessed by comparing it to theoretically similar and divergent variables including receiving care coordination/help, shared-decision making, satisfaction with communication, preventative dental care, and volunteer experience., Results: An exploratory factor analysis and item culling yielded 8 items addressing 3 subscales. A confirmatory factor analysis on separate data confirmed the identified subscales. A dichotomous and continuous scale was created with subscales including Guidance Toward Independence, Adequate Clinic Visit, and Continuity of Care Discussions. Model fit was excellent with an Eigenvalue of 1.08% and 89% variance explained in exploratory factor analysis and a Goodness of Fit index of 0.97 in confirmatory factor analysis. Examination of initial reliability and content and criterion validity indicated high reliability and validity for the scale and subscales., Conclusions: This was the first study to examine the psychometric properties of the HCT measure in the NSCH. The HCT measure identified in this study assesses providers' use of care plans, promotion of independence, clinic visit quality, and transfer assistance. This measure will be a useful tool in clinics, intervention development, and research for adolescents with and without special health care needs.retain-->., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest All authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose and no study sponsors had an influence on the design, analysis, writing, or decision to publish the manuscript., (Copyright © 2024 Academic Pediatric Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2024
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