Department of Surgery, Center for Surgery and Health Economics, Department of Surgery, Philadelphia, PA.
Department of Surgery, Perelman School of Medicine of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA.
Ann Surg. 2024 Aug 1;280(2):345-352. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000006234. Epub 2024 Feb 13.
The aim of this study was to develop and validate an instrument to measure Belonging in Surgery among surgical residents.
Belonging is the essential human need to maintain meaningful relationships and connections to one's community. Increased belongingness is associated with better well-being, job performance, and motivation to learn. However, no tools exist to measure belonging among surgical trainees.
A panel of experts adapted a belonging instrument for use among United States surgery residents. After administration of the 28-item instrument to residents at a single institution, a Cronbach alpha was calculated to measure internal consistency, and exploratory principal component analyses were performed. Multiple iterations of analyses with successively smaller item samples suggested the instrument could be shortened. The expert panel was reconvened to shorten the instrument. Descriptive statistics measured demographic factors associated with Belonging in Surgery.
The overall response rate was 52% (114 responses). The Cronbach alpha among the 28 items was 0.94 (95% CI: 0.93-0.96). The exploratory principal component analyses and subsequent Promax rotation yielded 1 dominant component with an eigenvalue of 12.84 (70% of the variance). The expert panel narrowed the final instrument to 11 items with an overall Cronbach alpha of 0.90 (95% CI: 0.86, 0.92). Belonging in Surgery was significantly associated with race (Black and Asian residents scoring lower than White residents), graduating with one's original intern cohort (residents who graduated with their original class scoring higher than those that did not), and inversely correlated with resident stress level.
An instrument to measure Belonging in Surgery was validated among surgical residents. With this instrument, Belonging in Surgery becomes a construct that may be used to investigate surgeon performance and well-being.
本研究旨在开发和验证一种测量外科住院医师归属感的工具。
归属感是人类维持与社区有意义的关系和联系的基本需求。归属感的增强与更好的幸福感、工作表现和学习动机有关。然而,目前还没有工具可以衡量外科受训者的归属感。
一组专家改编了一种适用于美国外科住院医师的归属感工具。在单一机构向住院医师发放 28 项工具后,计算 Cronbach alpha 以衡量内部一致性,并进行探索性主成分分析。对具有较小样本量的项目进行多次迭代分析表明,该工具可以缩短。召集专家小组缩短工具。描述性统计数据测量与外科归属感相关的人口统计学因素。
总体回复率为 52%(114 份回复)。28 项的 Cronbach alpha 为 0.94(95%置信区间:0.93-0.96)。探索性主成分分析和随后的 Promax 旋转得出 1 个主导成分,特征值为 12.84(70%的方差)。专家小组将最终工具缩小到 11 个项目,总体 Cronbach alpha 为 0.90(95%置信区间:0.86,0.92)。外科归属感与种族(黑人及亚裔住院医师的得分低于白人住院医师)、与原始实习 cohort 毕业(与原始班级一起毕业的住院医师得分高于未毕业的住院医师)显著相关,与住院医师的压力水平呈负相关。
一种用于衡量外科住院医师归属感的工具已在外科住院医师中得到验证。有了这个工具,归属感就成为了一个可以用来研究外科医生表现和幸福感的结构。