| Literature DB >> 33809956 |
Shu-Chun Lin1, Lee-Fen Ni1,2, Yu-Ming Wang3,4, Shu Hsin Lee5,6, Hung-Chang Liao7,8, Cheng-Yi Huang5,6, Ying-Chen Tseng5.
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic may cause a nursing shortage. Prelicensure nursing students who are exposed to high-stress COVID-19 events are related to defective career decision-making. This study validated the COVID-19 attitude scale and clarified how their attitudes about COVID-19 affected their behavioral intentions toward career decision-making. We conducted a cross-sectional study and recruited a convenience sample of 362 prelicensure nursing students from Northern and Central Taiwan. Two measurements were applied, including the Nursing Students Career Decision-making instrument and COVID-19 attitude scale. We used AMOS (version 22.0) to perform a confirmatory factor analysis. The Cronbach α of the COVID-19 attitude scale was 0.74 and consisted of four factors. The most positive attitude was the nursing belief factor, and the least positive factor was emotional burden. Prelicensure nursing students' COVID-19 attitudes were significantly positively associated with their career decision-making attitudes and perceived control (ß = 0.41 and ß = 0.40, respectively; p < 0.001). All the key latent variables explained significantly 23% of the variance in the career decision-making behavioral intentions module. In conclusion, the COVID-19 attitude scale is valid. Although the prelicensure nursing students' COVID-19 attitudes had no direct effect on career decision-making intentions, they had a direct effect on career decision-making attitudes and the perceived control.Entities:
Keywords: attitude scale; career attitudes; career decision-making; nursing shortage; pandemic threat; prelicensure nursing students
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33809956 PMCID: PMC8004179 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph18063272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Structural path model of career decision-making attitude, subjective norms, perceived control and behavioral intention with standardized coefficients. Note: ** p < 0.01. CDM: career decision-making.
Rotated factor loading of the COVID-19 attitude scale.
| Item | Factor of COVID-19 Attitude Scale | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (Attitude Code) | Factor 1 Emotional Burden | Factor 2 Nursing Belief | Factor 3 Institutional Protective Support | Factor 4 Hazard of COVID-19 |
| Factor 1: Cronbach’s α = 0.90 | ||||
| CV-A 19 | 0.854 | |||
| CV-A 20 | 0.853 | |||
| CV-A 19 | 0.836 | |||
| CV-A 16 | 0.799 | |||
| CV-A 8 | 0.719 | |||
| CV-A 7 | 0.694 | |||
| Factor 2: Cronbach’s α = 0.86 | ||||
| CV-A 14 | 0.881 | |||
| CV-A 15 | 0.876 | |||
| CV-A 13 | 0.748 | |||
| CV-A 12 | 0.735 | |||
| CV-A 18 | 0.599 | |||
| Factor 3: Cronbach’s α = 0.82 | ||||
| CV-A 9 | 0.804 | |||
| CV-A 10 | 0.745 | |||
| CV-A 11 | 0.741 | |||
| CV-A 4 | 0.737 | |||
| CV-A 2 | 0.609 | |||
| Factor 4: Cronbach’s α = 0.86 | ||||
| CV-A 5 | 0.830 | |||
| CV-A3 | 0.816 | |||
| CVA6 | 0.797 | |||
| CVA1 | 0.742 | |||
| Eigenvalue | 5.417 | 4.870 | 1.650 | 1.465 |
| % of variance | 20.80 | 17.44 | 14.53 | 14.25 |
Notes. Overall α = 0.74, total variance explained is 67.01 and CV-A: COVID-Attitude.
Validity, reliability, square root of AVE (√AVE) and the matrix of correlations between variables in career decision-making for nursing students.
| Variable | AVE | CR | α | Correlation | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||||
| 1. Career decision-making attitude | 0.533 | 0.850 | 0.878 | 0.730 | ||||
| 2. Career decision-making subjective norms | 0.482 | 0.821 | 0.758 | −0.06 | 0.630 | |||
| 3. Career decision-making perceived control | 0.553 | 0.890 | 0.895 | 0.628 ** | −0.08 | 0.730 | ||
| 4. Career decision-making behavioral intention | 0.473 | 0.771 | 0.721 | 0.416 ** | −0.13 ** | 0.412 ** | 0.687 | |
| 5. COVID-19 attitude | 0.600 | 0.950 | 0.740 | 0.414 ** | −0.06 | 0.404 ** | 0.223 ** | 0.775 |
Note: α = Cronbach’s alpha. Diagonal components in the correlation column are the √ AVE values extracted for each latent variable. ** p < 0.01.
Goodness-of-fit indices for the COVID-19 attitude moderating model.
| Assessment Index for Model Fit | Criteria for Assessment | Non-COVID-19 Attitude Moderator Model | COVID-19 Attitude Moderator Model | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value of Index | Results of Assessment | Value of Index | Results of Assessment | ||
| Absolute model fit indices | |||||
| Likelihood Ratio χ2( | 0.088 (0.957) | Good | 1.419 (0.934) | Good | |
| CMIN/DF (χ2/df) | ≤5 | 0.044 | Good | 0.069 | Good |
| GFI | ≥0.90 | 1.000 | Good | 1.000 | Good |
| AGFI | ≥0.90 | 0.999 | Good | 0.999 | Good |
| SRMR | ≤0.08 | 0.010 | Good | 0.005 | Good |
| RMSEA | ≤0.08 | 0.010 | Good | 0.001 | Good |
| Incremental model fit indices | |||||
| NFI | ≥0.90 | 1.000 | Good | 1.000 | Good |
| NNFI | ≥0.90 | 1.000 | Good | 1.002 | Good |
| RFI | ≥0.90 | 0.999 | Good | 0.999 | Good |
| IFI | ≥0.90 | 1.000 | Good | 1.000 | Good |
| CFI | ≥0.90 | 1.000 | Good | 1.000 | Good |
CMIN/DF = Minimum Discrepancy Function by Degrees of Freedom divided, df = degree of freedom, AGFI = adjusted goodness of fit, CFI = comparative fit index, GFI = goodness of fit, IFI= incremental fit index, NFI = normed fit index, NNFI = non-normed fit index, RFI = relative fit index, RMSEA = root mean square error of approximation and SRMR = standardized root mean square residual.
Figure 2Structural path model of the COVID-19 attitude, career decision-making attitude, subjective norms, perceived control and behavioral intentions with standardized coefficients. Note: ** p < 0.01.