Health Services and Outcomes Research, Children's Mercy Research Institute, Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
College of Nursing and Health Innovation Department of Undergraduate Nursing, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas, USA.
Res Nurs Health. 2022 Oct;45(5):549-558. doi: 10.1002/nur.22254. Epub 2022 Jul 23.
The COVID-19 pandemic created novel patient care circumstances that may have increased nurses' moral distress, including COVID-19 transmission risk and end-of-life care without family present. Well-established moral distress instruments do not capture these novel aspects of pandemic nursing care. The purpose of this study was to develop and evaluate the psychometric properties of the COVID-19 Moral Distress Scale (COVID-MDS), which was designed to provide a short MDS that includes both general and COVID-19-specific content. Researcher-developed COVID-19 items were evaluated for content validity by six nurse ethicist experts. This study comprised a pilot phase and a validation phase. The pilot sample comprised 329 respondents from inpatient practice settings and the emergency department in two academic medical centers. Exploratory factor analysis (EFA) was conducted with the pilot data. The EFA results were tested in a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) using the validation data. The validation sample comprised 5042 nurses in 107 hospitals throughout the United States. Construct validity was evaluated through CFA and known groups comparisons. Reliability was assessed by the omega coefficient from the CFA and Cronbach's alpha. A two-factor CFA model had good model fit and strong loadings, providing evidence of a COVID-19-specific dimension of moral distress. Reliability for both the general and COVID-19-specific moral distress subscales was satisfactory. Known groups comparisons identified statistically significant correlations as theorized. The COVID-MDS is a valid and reliable short tool for measuring moral distress in nurses including both broad systemic sources and COVID-19 specific sources.
COVID-19 大流行带来了新的患者护理环境,可能增加了护士的道德困境,包括 COVID-19 传播风险和临终关怀时家属无法在场。成熟的道德困境量表并不能捕捉到这些大流行护理的新方面。本研究旨在开发和评估 COVID-19 道德困境量表(COVID-MDS)的心理测量特性,该量表旨在提供一个简短的 MDS,包括一般和 COVID-19 特定的内容。研究人员开发的 COVID-19 项目由六名护士伦理专家评估其内容效度。本研究包括一个试点阶段和一个验证阶段。试点样本包括来自两家学术医疗中心的住院实践环境和急诊室的 329 名受访者。使用试点数据进行探索性因素分析(EFA)。验证数据进行验证性因素分析(CFA)。验证样本包括美国 107 家医院的 5042 名护士。通过 CFA 和已知组比较评估构念效度。可靠性通过 CFA 的 omega 系数和 Cronbach 的 alpha 进行评估。具有良好模型拟合度和较强负荷的两因素 CFA 模型提供了 COVID-19 特异性道德困境维度的证据。一般和 COVID-19 特异性道德困境子量表的可靠性均令人满意。已知组比较确定了理论上的统计学显著相关性。COVID-MDS 是一种有效的、可靠的短工具,用于衡量护士的道德困境,包括广泛的系统来源和 COVID-19 特定的来源。