| Literature DB >> 22046210 |
Anne Flodén1, Annette Lennerling, Isabell Fridh, Magnus Rizell, Anna Forsberg.
Abstract
The consequences of advocacy in nursing are critical when caring for a potential organ donor. No specific instrument has been available to measure attitudes toward organ donor advocacy. The aim of this study was to develop and psychometrically evaluate an instrument for measuring intensive and critical care (ICU) nurses' attitudes toward organ donor advocacy. The study was conducted in two stages: instrument development and instrument evaluation and refinement. A questionnaire was developed (Attitude Toward Organ Donor Advocacy Scale (ATODAS)), which was sent to half of all nurses working in ICUs (general-, neuro-, thoracic- or paediatric-) in Sweden (n=1180). The final response rate was 42.5% (n=502). In order to explore validity and reliability, the expected scale dimensionality of the questionnaire was examined both by explorative principal component analysis (with oblique, varimax rotation) and by confirmatory multi-trait analysis. The confirmatory factor analysis indicated that the ATODAS could best be explained by five factors; Attitudes toward championing organ donation at a structural hospital level; Attitudes toward championing organ donation at a political and research level; Attitudes toward actively and personally safeguarding the will and wishes of the potential organ donor, Attitudes toward safeguarding the potential donor's will and wishes by a professional approach and Attitudes toward safeguarding the will and wishes of the relatives. This initial testing indicated that the ATODAS has good psychometric properties and can be used in future research to explore if interventions may influence attitudes and behaviors related to organ donor advocacy.Entities:
Keywords: Advocacy; brain death; intensive and critical care; nursing; organ donation; psychometric evaluation.
Year: 2011 PMID: 22046210 PMCID: PMC3204424 DOI: 10.2174/1874434601105010065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Nurs J ISSN: 1874-4346
Demographics of the Swedish ICU Nurses (n=502)
| Mean Age (Range) | 47 years, (24-66 years) |
| Mean ICU work experience | 16 years (0.5-40 years) |
| Female | 88.5% (n=445) |
| Male | 9.5% (n=48) |
| Missing responses | 2% (n=9) |
| Local hospital | 26.5% (n=133) |
| Regional hospital | 33.5% (n=169) |
| University hospital | 37% (n=185) |
| Missing responses | 3% (n=15) |
| General intensive care unit (ICU) | 74% (n=373) |
| Neurosurgical intensive care unit | 7% (n=34) |
| Thoracic intensive care unit | 8% (n=40) |
| Paediatric intensive care unit | 2% (n=11) |
| Other type of ICU e.g. infection ICU | 7.5% (n=37) |
| Missing responses | 1.5% (n=7) |
| Unit manager, Assistant unit manager | 0.5% (n=2) |
| Section leader | 3.5% (n=18) |
| Unit teacher | 0.5% (n=2) |
| ICU nurse, with special responsibility for donation | 5.5% (n=27) |
| ICU staff nurse | 68% (n=342) |
| Other position | 20.5% (n=104) |
| Missing responses | 1.5% (n=7) |
Level of Education Among Swedish ICU Nurses (n=502)
| Yes | 97.5% (n=488) |
| No | 1.5% (n=8) |
| Missing responses | 1% (n=6) |
| Yes | 38% (n=191) |
| No | 60.5% (n=303) |
| Missing responses | 1.5% (n=8) |
| Yes | 10% (n=49) |
| No | 87% (n=438) |
| Missing responses | 3% (n=15) |
Work Experience Among Swedish ICU Nurses (n=502)
| Never | 8.5% (n=43) |
| 1-5 times | 52% (n=255) |
| 6-10 times | 10.5% (n=52) |
| > 10 times | 8% (n=41) |
| Missing responses | 2% (n=9) |
| Never | 29.5% (n=148) |
| 1-5 times | 51% (n=255) |
| 6-10 times | 10.5% (n=52) |
| > 10 times | 8% (n=41) |
| Missing responses | 1% (n=6) |
Personal Experience of Organ Donation and Transplantation (n=502)
| Yes | 6% (n=31) |
| No | 91.5% (n=459) |
| Missing responses | 2.5% (n=12) |
| Yes | 10% (n=51) |
| No | 87.5% (n=439) |
| Missing responses | 2.5% (n=12) |
Rotated Component Matrix with Cronbach’s Alfa Values
| ATODA Factors | Items | Item Scale Correlation | Cronbach’s Alfa |
|---|---|---|---|
| In my ICU ward I help develop guidelines that take account of the situation of potential donors and the needs of their relatives. | .78 | .90 | |
| I co-operate with other professionals outside my ICU (e.g. X-ray and lab) to improve organ donation guidelines. | .76 | ||
| If the need arises, I take action on a structural level to change the organ donation policy document. | .72 | ||
| If the need arises, I would resort to other actions to achieve good routines for organ donation, e.g. training of staff, a reflection group for ethical issues etc. | .71 | ||
| If the need arises, I take part in work to improve the organ donation guidelines in my ICU ward. | .70 | ||
| If the need arises, I point out the importance of organ donation guidelines to the ICU managers. | .70 | ||
| I employ available scientific knowledge to ensure that the method of working in connection with organ donation is evidence based. | .65 | ||
| I promote communication and cooperation between various professional categories in the care of a potential donor. | .63 | ||
| I discuss and promote organ donation outside my ICU. | .62 | ||
| I communicate problems that arise in relation to organ donation to the senior management of my unit/department. | .60 | ||
| I take part in decision-making that affects organ donation. | .69 | .62 | |
| I am considering starting to work politically to promote organ donation. | .67 | ||
| I participate in research that affects organ donation. | .55 | ||
| If possible, I would take part in research that influences guidelines and policies regarding organ donation. | .47 | ||
| I will take action if the medical treatment of the potential donor is unsuitable. | .74 | .80 | |
| I question inadequate care of a potential donor performed by a nurse or doctor in my ward. | .73 | ||
| I call attention to any team member who hinders the correct and consistent care of the potential donor. | .72 | ||
| I will argue against all forms of unethical treatment of a potential donor. | .68 | ||
| I discuss with the intensivist in attendance about the consequences of his/her decision(s) regarding the potential donor. | .59 | ||
| If known to me, I express the will of the potential donor | .73 | .73 | |
| I bring the will of the deceased and/or relatives regarding organ donation to the attention of the intensivist in charge and the doctor with responsibility for patients (PAL). | .72 | ||
| It is my responsibility to represent the potential donor throughout the donation process. | .66 | ||
| It is my duty to respect the will of the potential donor. | .59 | ||
| I am receptive to and respect the will of the potential donor even if I do not share his/her view. | .59 | ||
| I make colleagues in my shift aware of the will of the deceased and/or next of kin regarding organ donation. | .47 | ||
| I help next of kin to weigh the reasons for and against organ donation. | .71 | .75 | |
| I discuss any consequences of next of kin’s decisions with them. | .65 | ||
| I try to help next of kin to reach a decision they can live with. | .59 | ||
| When there is a possibility of organ donation, it is my duty to explain the meaning of the Transplantation Act to next of kin, including their rights. | .49 | ||
| I provide information on a regular basis to next of kin about the care of the potential donor. | .47 | ||
| I ensure that next of kin understand the medical actions that will be taken when the deceased has been identified as a medically suitable donor. | .43 | ||
| .I remind other staff members involved in the care of the potential donor that next of kin have a right to continuous information. | 42 |
Correlations Between the Factors of ATODAS Measuring Five Factors:
Attitudes Towards Championing OD at a Structural Hospital Level (ATODA-SHL)
Attitudes Towards Championing OD at a Political and Research Level (ATODA-PRL)
Attitudes Towards Actively and Personally Safeguarding the Will and Wishes of the POD (ATODA-APS)
Attitudes Towards Safeguarding the Potential Donor’s Will and Wishes by a Professional Approach (ATODA-SPPA)
Attitudes Towards Safeguarding the Will and Wishes of the Relatives (ATODA-SWR)
| ATODA-SHL | ATODA-PRL | ATODA-APS | ATODA-SPPA | ATODA-SWR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| .41 | .50 | .22 | .50 | ||
| .41 | .18 | .07 | .20 | ||
| .50 | .18 | .35 | .47 | ||
| .22 | .07 | .35 | .37 | ||
| .50 | .20 | .47 | .37 |
= Correlation is significant at the 0.01 level (2-tailed).