Psychometric assessment of three newly developed implementation outcome measures
University of Washington · Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute · +5 more institutions
Abstract
Implementation outcome measures are essential for monitoring and evaluating the success of implementation efforts. Yet, currently available measures lack conceptual clarity and have largely unknown reliability and validity. This study developed and psychometrically assessed three new measures: the Acceptability of Intervention Measure (AIM), Intervention Appropriateness Measure (IAM), and Feasibility of Intervention Measure (FIM).
Thirty-six implementation scientists and 27 mental health professionals assigned 31 items to the constructs and rated their confidence in their assignments. The Wilcoxon one-sample signed rank test was used to assess substantive and discriminant content validity. Exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis (EFA and CFA) and Cronbach alphas were used to assess the validity of the conceptual model. Three hundred twenty-six mental health counselors read one of six randomly assigned vignettes depicting a therapist contemplating adopting an evidence-based practice (EBP). Participants used 15 items to rate the therapist's perceptions of the acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility of adopting the EBP. CFA and Cronbach alphas were used to refine the scales, assess structural validity, and assess reliability. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to assess known-groups validity. Finally, half of the counselors were randomly assigned to receive the same vignette and the other half the opposite vignette; and all were asked to re-rate acceptability, appropriateness, and feasibility. Pearson correlation coefficients were used to assess test-retest reliability and linear regression to assess sensitivity to change.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 101.01
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 36
Authors
8- BJBryan J. WeinerCorresponding
University of Washington
- CCCara C. Lewis
Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, University of Washington, Behavioral Tech Research, Inc., Indiana University Bloomington
- CSCameo Stanick
Child & Family Service
- BJByron J. Powell
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- CNCaitlin N. Dorsey
Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Health informatics
- Health services research
- Health administration
- Public health
- Outcome (game theory)
- Nursing
- Reduced inequalities