| Literature DB >> 21777479 |
Christian D Helfrich1, Dean Blevins, Jeffrey L Smith, P Adam Kelly, Timothy P Hogan, Hildi Hagedorn, Patricia M Dubbert, Anne E Sales.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is widespread interest in measuring organizational readiness to implement evidence-based practices in clinical care. However, there are a number of challenges to validating organizational measures, including inferential bias arising from the halo effect and method bias - two threats to validity that, while well-documented by organizational scholars, are often ignored in health services research. We describe a protocol to comprehensively assess the psychometric properties of a previously developed survey, the Organizational Readiness to Change Assessment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21777479 PMCID: PMC3157428 DOI: 10.1186/1748-5908-6-76
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
ORC instruments with published psychometrics and validation issues
| ORC instrument | Description | Validation issue | Key citations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Organizational e-readiness | Measures organizational members' perceptions of readiness for adoption of e-commerce. | Not suited to measuring implementation of general, evidence-based health service practices. | [ |
| Organizational readiness | Measures organizational members' perceptions of organization's data warehouse process maturity. | Not suited to measuring implementation of general, evidence-based health service practices. | [ |
| Organizational readiness for change | Two scales drawn from Pasmore Sociotechnical Systems Assessment Survey (STSAS) measuring innovativeness and cooperativeness. | The STSAS, while validated, was not designed or validated to be a measure of ORC; authors drew on two subscales they believed are related to organizational readiness. | [ |
| TCU organizational readiness for change | Measures organizational members' perceptions of the motivation for change, adequacy of resources, staff attributes, and organizational climate. | Extensively used, with published evidence of reliability and validity. However, results have varied, with poor scale reliability reported by recent studies, and inconsistent relationships observed between individual scales or readiness dimensions and outcomes. | [ |
| Change-related commitment | Measures employee's agreement and willingness to work toward a goal of organizational change. | Published evidence of reliability and validity, but designed for individual-level factors. Ignores the role of interdependence among the individuals involved. | [ |
| Commitment to change | Measures three dimensions of organizational members' commitment to a change: affective commitment, continuance commitment, and normative commitment. | Published evidence of reliability and validity, but designed for individual-level factors. Ignores the role of interdependence among the individuals involved. | [ |
| Readiness for organizational change | Measures organizational members' perceptions of the appropriateness of change, management support, self-efficacy and personal benefit. | Published evidence of reliability and validity, but designed for individual-level factors. Ignores the role of interdependence among the individuals involved. | [ |
Summarized from Weiner BJ, Amick H, Lee S-YD: Conceptualization and measurement of organizational readiness for change: A review of the literature in health services research and other fields. Medical Care Research and Review 2008, 65(4):379-436.
Figure 1ORCA scales, subscales and outcomes. This figure illustrates the composition of the ORCA scales and their hypothesized relationship to organizational readiness for change, and subsequently to implementation outcomes.
Overview of validation analyses for primary aims
| Type of validation | Definition | Analysis | Data Source | Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aim 1 | ||||
| Inter-rater reliability | The consistency of measurement results across different raters given identical conditions | ICC calculated from HLM to determine if respondents have higher agreement within facility and project than between. | Individual-level, baseline ORCA data from partner projects | k = 208 |
| Internal consistency reliability | The consistency of items within a given scale, with the same rater | Cronbach's alpha, and item-rest correlation to determine if items within subscales, and subscales within scales, correlate more strongly than between subscales/scales. | Individual-level, baseline ORCA data from partner projects | k = 208 |
| Aim 2 | ||||
| Content validity | A check of the instrument's items against the content domain of the construct | Expert panel review of conceptual domains, and Delphi survey on ORCA items assessing (a) degree of match to conceptual domain, and (b) importance for understanding organizational readiness; | Transcripts of expert panel discussion and structured Delphi survey | n = 14 (panel members) |
| Confirmatory factor analysis to match items to subscales, and subscales to scales. | Individual-level, baseline ORCA data from partner projects | k = 208 | ||
| Aim 3 | ||||
| Predictive validity | Degree to which an instrument predicts a theoretically meaningful outcome. | Multivariate regression in which the ORCA scales serves as IV, and implementation effect size as the DV. | Site-level, baseline ORCA data, and individual-level implementation outcomes | k = 146 |
| Concurrent validity | Degree to which an instrument distinguishes groups it should theoretically distinguish ( | Multivariate regression in which external facilitation intervention is the IV and the ORCA scales are the DV. | Site-level, follow-up ORCA data, and intervention cohort (external facilitation vs. control site) | k = 122 |
| Convergent validity | The degree to which an instrument performs in a similar manner to other instruments that purportedly measure the same construct. | Multivariate regression with ORCA scales as IVs, and JSI items on satisfaction with direct supervision and senior leadership serve as DVs. | Individual-level, baseline ORCA and job satisfaction data | k = 158 |
| Discriminant validity | Degree to which an instrument performs in a different manner to other instruments that measure different constructs. | Multivariate regression with ORCA scales as IVs, and overall JSI and satisfaction with pay as DVs. | Individual-level, baseline ORCA and job satisfaction data | k = 158 |
IV = independent variable, DV = dependent variable, ORCA = Organizational Readiness for change Assessment, JSI = job satisfaction index, HLM = Hierarchical Linear Modeling, k = number of individual respondents, n = number of sites.