Measuring advance care planning behavior in Dutch adults: translation, cultural adaptation and validation of the Advance Care Planning Engagement Survey

BackgroundAdvance care planning (ACP) enables people to define, discuss, and record preferences for treatment and care. Measures of ACP behavior are lacking in the Netherlands. We aimed to translate, culturally adapt and validate the 34-item ACP Engagement Survey into Dutch.MethodsFollowing validation guidelines, we tested content validity, internal consistency, reproducibility, construct validity, interpretability and criterion validity among persons with and without chronic disease.ResultsForward-backward translation indicated the need of only minor adaptations. Two hundred thirty-two person... Mehr ...

Verfasser: van der Smissen, Doris
van der Heide, Agnes
Sudore, Rebecca L
Rietjens, Judith AC
Korfage, Ida J
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Reihe/Periodikum: BMC Medical Research Methodology, vol 21, iss 1
Verlag/Hrsg.: eScholarship
University of California
Schlagwörter: Health Services and Systems / Health Sciences / Clinical Research / Good Health and Well Being / Adult / Advance Care Planning / Humans / Psychometrics / Reproducibility of Results / Surveys and Questionnaires / Translations / Behavior change / Patient reported outcome measure / Translation / Dutch / Validation / Chronic disease / Public Health and Health Services / General & Internal Medicine / Epidemiology / Public health
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27010624
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://escholarship.org/uc/item/4m12m1k6

BackgroundAdvance care planning (ACP) enables people to define, discuss, and record preferences for treatment and care. Measures of ACP behavior are lacking in the Netherlands. We aimed to translate, culturally adapt and validate the 34-item ACP Engagement Survey into Dutch.MethodsFollowing validation guidelines, we tested content validity, internal consistency, reproducibility, construct validity, interpretability and criterion validity among persons with and without chronic disease.ResultsForward-backward translation indicated the need of only minor adaptations. Two hundred thirty-two persons completed baseline and retest surveys; 121 were aged ≥60 years. Persons with chronic disease (n = 151) considered the survey more valuable than those without (66 vs. 59, p < 0.001, scale of 20-100), indicating good content validity. Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha: 0.97) and reproducibility (intraclass correlation: 0.88) were good. Total ACP Engagement was higher among persons with chronic disease than those without (2.9 vs. 2.4, p < 0.01, scale of 1 to 5), indicating good psychometric support for construct validity and interpretability. Positive correlations of the ACP Engagement Survey and the General Self-Efficacy survey indicated good criterion validity (p < 0.05).ConclusionsThis study provided good psychometric support for the validity and reliability of the Dutch 34-item ACP Engagement Survey. This instrument can be used to assess involvement in ACP in adults with and without chronic disease.