The preliminary measurement properties of the Person-centred Community Care Inventory (PERCCI).
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Publication Date
2018-10Journal Title
Quality of Life Research
ISSN
1573-2649
Publisher
Springer Nature
Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Kelly, M., Wilberforce, M., Challis, D., Davies, L., & Roberts, C. (2018). The preliminary measurement properties of the Person-centred Community Care Inventory (PERCCI).. Quality of Life Research https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-018-1917-1
Abstract
Purpose: Researchers investigating person-centredness in older people’s long-term community care are hindered by the lack of appropriate measures. Studies have tended to rely on proxy indicators or generic instruments, risking invalid results. This new research aimed to develop and psychometrically test a person-centredness scale for use in older people’s community services.
Methods: Questionnaire items were sourced from groups of older people and mapped to a conceptual framework of person-centredness. A postal questionnaire in 2015-16 tested these items with older people supported by mental health and social care services in five areas of England. Dimensionality was assessed through exploratory factor analysis and a confirmatory bifactor model, with classical item analysis removing weak items. Test-retest analysis was undertaken through a repeated postal questionnaire three weeks after the first.
Results: Three factors were identified, representing (i) interpersonal and (ii) organisational aspects of person-centred care; and (iii) negatively-phrased items. Removing weaker items resulted in an 18-item scale. The bifactor analysis concluded the summary scale was essentially unidimensional. The PERCCI had excellent reliability, with Intra-Class Correlation Coefficient of 0.886 [95% CI: 0.818 - 0.929]. A priori hypotheses about associations with satisfaction metrics and support variables were broadly confirmed.
Conclusions: The PERCCI has promising measurement properties and can be recommended for use in research with older adults using community mental health and social care services. Future developments must identify how sensitive the instrument is in detecting changing service quality.
Key words: person-centred care; patient-centered medicine; older people; dementia; community care; social care; psychometrics; patient experience; measurement.
Sponsorship
NIHR grant number DRF-2013-06-038
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11136-018-1917-1
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/283446
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