Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology, & Reproductive Sciences, University of California, San Francisco, USA.
BMC Womens Health. 2023 Nov 17;23(1):616. doi: 10.1186/s12905-023-02721-5.
To assess psychometric properties of two scales developed to measure the quality of person-centered care during pregnancy and childbirth in the United States-the Person-Centered Prenatal Care (PCPC-US) and Person-Centered Maternity Care (PCMC-US) scales-in a low-income predominantly Latinx population in California.
Data were collected from July 2020 to June 2023 from surveys of low-income pregnant and birthing people in Fresno, California, participating in the "Engaging Mothers and Babies; Reimagining Antenatal Care for Everyone" (EMBRACE) trial. Research staff administered the 26-item PCPC-US scale at 30-34 weeks' gestation (n = 315) and the 35-item PCMC-US scale at 10-14 weeks after birth (n = 286), using the language preferred by the participant (English or Spanish). We assessed construct, criterion, and known group validity and internal consistency of the scales.
78% of respondents identified as Latinx. Factor analysis identified one dominant factor for each scale that accounted for over 60% of the cumulative variance, with most items loading at > 0.3. The items also loaded adequately on sub-scales for "dignity and respect," "communication and autonomy," and "responsive and supportive care." Cronbach's alpha for the full scales were > 0.9 and between 0.70 and 0.87 for the sub-scales. Summative scores range from 0 to 100, with higher scores indicating higher person-centered care. Correlations with scores on scales measuring prenatal care quality and birth experience provided evidence for criterion validity, while associations with known predictors provided evidence for known-group validity.
The PCPC-US and PCMC-US scales, which were developed using a community-engaged process and found to have good psychometric properties in a largely high-income sample of Black women, were shown to also have good psychometric properties in a sample of low-income primarily Latinx women. Both scales provide valid and reliable tools to measure person-centered care experiences among minoritized communities to support efforts to reduce existing birth inequities.
评估在美国加利福尼亚州一个低收入、以拉丁裔为主的人群中,用于衡量妊娠和分娩期间以患者为中心的护理质量的两个量表的心理测量学特性,这两个量表是:“以患者为中心的产前保健(PCPC-US)”和“以患者为中心的产妇保健(PCMC-US)”。
数据来自 2020 年 7 月至 2023 年 6 月间参与“参与母亲和婴儿;为每个人重新构想产前保健(EMBRACE)”试验的加利福尼亚州弗雷斯诺的低收入孕妇和产妇的调查。研究人员在妊娠 30-34 周(n=315)时使用参与者首选的语言(英语或西班牙语)使用 26 项 PCPC-US 量表,在产后 10-14 周(n=286)时使用 35 项 PCMC-US 量表进行评估。我们评估了量表的结构、标准和已知群体的有效性和内部一致性。
78%的受访者为拉丁裔。因子分析确定了每个量表的一个主要因素,占总方差的 60%以上,大多数项目的负荷系数>0.3。这些项目也很好地加载在“尊严和尊重”、“沟通和自主权”和“响应性和支持性护理”的子量表上。完整量表的克朗巴赫α系数大于 0.9,子量表的系数在 0.70 到 0.87 之间。综合评分范围为 0 到 100,得分越高表示以患者为中心的护理水平越高。与衡量产前护理质量和分娩体验的量表的评分相关性提供了标准有效性的证据,而与已知预测因素的关联为已知群体有效性提供了证据。
PCPC-US 和 PCMC-US 量表是使用社区参与的过程开发的,在一个以黑人女性为主的高收入样本中发现具有良好的心理测量学特性,在一个以低收入、以拉丁裔为主的女性样本中也表现出良好的心理测量学特性。这两个量表都为衡量少数族裔群体的以患者为中心的护理体验提供了有效和可靠的工具,以支持减少现有生育不平等的努力。