Theunissen Maurice, Peters Madelon L, Schouten Erik G W, Fiddelers Audrey A A, Willemsen Mark G A, Pinto Patrícia R, Gramke Hans-Fritz, Marcus Marco A E
Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Management, Maastricht University Medical Center+, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
Department of Clinical Psychological Science, Maastricht University, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2014 Jun 24;9(6):e100225. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0100225. eCollection 2014.
Because existing instruments for assessing surgical fear seem either too general or too limited, the Surgical Fear Questionnaire (SFQ) was developed. The aim of this study is to assess the validity and reliability of the SFQ.
Based on existing literature and expert consultation the ten-item SFQ was composed. Data on the SFQ were obtained from 5 prospective studies (N = 3233) in inpatient or day surgery patients. These data were used for exploratory factor analysis (EFA), confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), reliability analysis and validity analysis.
EFA in Study 1 and 2 revealed a two-factor structure with one factor associated with fear of the short-term consequences of surgery (SFQ-s, item 1-4) and the other factor with fear of the long-term consequences of surgery (SFQ-l, item 5-10). However, in both studies two items of the SFQ-l had low factor loadings. Therefore in Study 3 and 4 the 2-factor structure was tested and confirmed by CFA in an eight-item version of the SFQ. Across all studies significant correlations of the SFQ with pain catastrophizing, state anxiety, and preoperative pain intensity indicated good convergent validity. Internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha) was between 0.765-0.920 (SFQ-total), 0.766-0.877 (SFQ-s), and 0.628-0.899 (SFQ-l). The SFQ proved to be sensitive to detect differences based on age, sex, education level, employment status and preoperative pain intensity.
The SFQ is a valid and reliable eight-item index of surgical fear consisting of two subscales: fear of the short-term consequences of surgery and fear of the long-term consequences.
由于现有的评估手术恐惧的工具要么过于笼统,要么过于局限,因此开发了手术恐惧问卷(SFQ)。本研究的目的是评估SFQ的有效性和可靠性。
基于现有文献和专家咨询,编制了包含10个条目的SFQ。SFQ的数据来自5项针对住院患者或日间手术患者的前瞻性研究(N = 3233)。这些数据用于探索性因素分析(EFA)、验证性因素分析(CFA)、信度分析和效度分析。
研究1和研究2中的EFA揭示了一个两因素结构,一个因素与对手术短期后果的恐惧相关(SFQ-s,条目1 - 4),另一个因素与对手术长期后果的恐惧相关(SFQ-l,条目5 - 10)。然而,在两项研究中,SFQ-l的两个条目因素负荷较低。因此,在研究3和研究4中,对两因素结构进行了测试,并在一个8条目版本的SFQ中通过CFA得到了证实。在所有研究中,SFQ与疼痛灾难化、状态焦虑和术前疼痛强度之间的显著相关性表明其具有良好的收敛效度。内部一致性(Cronbach's α)在0.765 - 0.920(SFQ总分)、0.766 - 0.877(SFQ-s)和0.628 - 0.899(SFQ-l)之间。SFQ被证明对基于年龄、性别、教育水平、就业状况和术前疼痛强度的差异具有敏感性。
SFQ是一个有效且可靠的包含8个条目的手术恐惧指标,由两个子量表组成:对手术短期后果的恐惧和对手术长期后果的恐惧。