Literature DB >> 15865474

Development of a questionnaire measuring student attitudes to working and living in rural areas.

Maree E Adams1, Joanne Dollard, Jane Hollins, John Petkov.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Student attachments in rural locations have been instigated, in part to foster positive attitudes to rural practice and encourage rural recruitment. Based on medical and allied health literature, it was hypothesised that students' attitudes to rural practice and rural life encompasses the following three dimensions: (1) community and social issues; (2) family and personal issues; and (3) professional issues. However, there are limited studies assessing attitudinal change before and after rural placement and no valid and reliable tools which examine change across all three dimensions. This article reports on the development, reliability and validity of such a tool to fill this gap in the rural health research literature.
METHODS: Students who undertook a rural placement in South Australia or a rural placement organised by the Mt Isa Centre for Rural and Remote Health in Queensland, Australia, during 2001 were invited to complete a pre- and post-placement questionnaire (n = 243). The response rate for the pre-placement questionnaire was 74.9% (n = 182) and 50.2% (n = 122) for the post-placement questionnaire. A literature review informed the content of the initial questionnaire, which consisted of a series of statements to which respondents were instructed to indicate how strongly they agreed or disagreed on a Likert scale of one to six. The assessment of validity and reliability of the questionnaire involved three main processes. Content validity was assessed by discussion and rating by academics and students, resulting in 18 questionnaire items. Exploratory factor analysis was used to provide evidence of construct validity. The internal consistency reliability of the questionnaire was assessed using Cronbach's alpha.
RESULTS: The Cronbach's alpha coefficient for the post-questionnaire was 0.68, acceptable for newly developed scales. Exploratory factor analysis and varimax rotation was conducted for pre- and post-placement (n = 110) questionnaires. The pre-placement questionnaire did not lend itself to logical interpretation, probably due to the diverse attitudes students may have pre-rural placement. However the factors on the post-placement questionnaire were interpretable. The Scree Plot indicated four factors, explaining 60.82% of the total variance. The factors were rotated using the normalised varimax rotation method. The factors extracted were: (1) friendliness and support in rural areas; (2) isolation and socialisation problems associated with living and working in rural areas; (3) enjoyable aspects of living in a rural area; and (4) opportunities that working in a rural area provides.
CONCLUSIONS: Analysis of the Student Attitudes to Rural Practice and Life Questionnaire provides evidence of validity. The study identified four factors associated with student attitudes to living and working in rural areas, which differ from those hypothesised. The main deviation was Factor 2, grouping all the negative aspects of isolation and socialisation in a rural area. The resulting factors provide a more integrated reflection of the rural experience, rather than the rigid categorisation of professional, social and personal issues. Reliability was found to be adequate. The questionnaire is able to measure student attitudes to rural practice and rural life, and may be used to evaluate the impact of rural placement on student attitudes.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15865474

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Rural Remote Health        ISSN: 1445-6354            Impact factor:   1.759


  7 in total

1.  Recruiting medical students to rural practice: perspectives of medical students and rural recruiters.

Authors:  Leah Jutzi; Kelly Vogt; Erin Drever; Jeff Nisker
Journal:  Can Fam Physician       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 3.275

2.  Attracting and retaining health workers in rural areas: investigating nurses' views on rural posts and policy interventions.

Authors:  Kethi Mullei; Sandra Mudhune; Jackline Wafula; Eunice Masamo; Michael English; Catherine Goodman; Mylene Lagarde; Duane Blaauw
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2010-07-02       Impact factor: 2.655

3.  Use of Student Evaluation of Teaching (SET) Survey to Evaluate Effectiveness of Teaching in a Leadership Course among Dental Students over Three Years.

Authors:  Muhammad Nazir; Asim Al-Ansari; Khalifa AlKhalifa; Balgis Gaffar; Jehan AlHumaid
Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal       Date:  2020-06-01

Review 4.  Identifying features of quality in rural placements for health students: scoping review.

Authors:  Elyce Green; Claire Quilliam; Lyndal Sheepway; Catherine A Hays; Leigh Moore; Rohan L Rasiah; Jodie Bailie; Christine Howard; Sarah Hyde; Imo Inyang; Kylie Matthews; Jane Ferns; Leanne J Brown; Sara Jones; Marjorie Collett
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-04-08       Impact factor: 2.692

5.  Where do students in the health professions want to work?

Authors:  Deborah Schofield; Susan Fletcher; Jeffery Fuller; Hudson Birden; Sue Page
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2009-08-18

6.  Outcomes of the Northern Ontario School of Medicine's distributed medical education programmes: protocol for a longitudinal comparative multicohort study.

Authors:  John C Hogenbirk; Margaret G French; Patrick E Timony; Roger P Strasser; Dan Hunt; Raymond W Pong
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2015-07-27       Impact factor: 2.692

7.  Enhancing paramedics procedural skills using a cadaveric model.

Authors:  David Lim; Stephen Bartlett; Peter Horrocks; Courtenay Grant-Wakefield; Jodie Kelly; Vivienne Tippett
Journal:  BMC Med Educ       Date:  2014-07-08       Impact factor: 2.463

  7 in total

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