BACKGROUND: Organizational climate is the set of perceptions shared by workers who occupy the same workplace. The main goal of this study is to develop a new organizational climate scale and to determine its psychometric properties. METHOD: The sample consisted of 3,163 Health Service workers. A total of 88.7% of participants worked in hospitals, and 11.3% in primary care; 80% were women and 20% men, with a mean age of 51.9 years (SD= 6.28). RESULTS: The proposed scale consists of 50 Likert-type items, with an alpha coefficient of 0.97, and an essentially one-dimensional structure. The discrimination indexes of the items are greater than 0.40, and the items show no differential item functioning in relation to participants' sex. A short version of the scale was developed, made up of 15 items, with discrimination indexes higher than 0.40, an alpha coefficient of 0.94, and its structure was clearly one-dimensional. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that the new scale has adequate psychometric properties, allowing a reliable and valid assessment of organizational climate.
BACKGROUND: Organizational climate is the set of perceptions shared by workers who occupy the same workplace. The main goal of this study is to develop a new organizational climate scale and to determine its psychometric properties. METHOD: The sample consisted of 3,163 Health Service workers. A total of 88.7% of participants worked in hospitals, and 11.3% in primary care; 80% were women and 20% men, with a mean age of 51.9 years (SD= 6.28). RESULTS: The proposed scale consists of 50 Likert-type items, with an alpha coefficient of 0.97, and an essentially one-dimensional structure. The discrimination indexes of the items are greater than 0.40, and the items show no differential item functioning in relation to participants' sex. A short version of the scale was developed, made up of 15 items, with discrimination indexes higher than 0.40, an alpha coefficient of 0.94, and its structure was clearly one-dimensional. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that the new scale has adequate psychometric properties, allowing a reliable and valid assessment of organizational climate.
Authors: Susanne M Maassen; Anne Marie J W Weggelaar Jansen; Gerard Brekelmans; Hester Vermeulen; Catharina J van Oostveen Journal: Int J Qual Health Care Date: 2020-11-09 Impact factor: 2.038
Authors: Omar Hamdan Mohammad Alkharabsheh; Amar Hisham Jaaffar; Ying-Chyi Chou; Erni Rawati; Pok Wei Fong Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2022-07-19 Impact factor: 4.614