1 / 63

The Development of the Thai Version of the Diabetes Management Self-efficacy Scale for Older Adults with Ty

The Development of the Thai Version of the Diabetes Management Self-efficacy Scale for Older Adults with Type 2 Diabetes. Dissertation Defense Wipa Iamsumang , RN, MSN, GCNS, PhD-c March 27 th , 2009. Acknowledgement. Dissertation Committee

abe
Download Presentation

The Development of the Thai Version of the Diabetes Management Self-efficacy Scale for Older Adults with Ty

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Development of the Thai Version of the Diabetes Management Self-efficacy Scale for Older Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Dissertation Defense WipaIamsumang, RN, MSN, GCNS, PhD-c March 27th , 2009

  2. Acknowledgement • Dissertation Committee • Dr. Sherry Pomeroy, Dissertation Co-Chair • Dr. Yvonne K. Scherer, Dissertation Co-Chair • Dr. Yow-Wu Bill Wu, Committee member • Participants • Sigma Theta Tua International (Gamma Kappa Chapter) • Mark Diamond Research Foundation • Translation team • Dr. Timothy Harigan Dr. VilipornRunkawatt • Carolyn Montgomery PhD-c. Diane Ryan PhD-c. • William Drischler PhD-s Mr. NakarateRunkawatt • Expert team • Dr. SutatanaChomson Dr. DuagrudeeLasuka • Dr. ThawornLorga Ms. JaruwonSrithong • Mrs. SukunyaKumwan

  3. Contents of Presentation • Background • Purpose of the Study • Research Questions • Sample • Data Collection • Data Analysis • Results • Limitations • Implications

  4. Background • In 2008, 11 % of the older adults in the total Thai population • Life expectancy 73 yr. : • 70 yr. for males • 77yr. for females • Aging Index (elders/100 children) • 23 in 2003 to50in 2008 • Aging Dependency Ratio (elders/100 adults) • 14 in 2003 to 16 in 2008 (National Statistic Office of Thailand , 2008)

  5. Background: Epidemiologic Data • In 2005, 50% of the older adults had chronic illness • Diabetes was the 2nd cause of their chronic illness • Known to reduce life expectancy in the older adults. • Associated with increased mortality & morbidity • In 2004, the 3rdcause of disability for female , the 8th for male. • In 2007, the 2nd leading cause of death for older females (Diabetic nephropathy) (National Statistics Office of Thailand, 2008)

  6. Background : Diabetes Management • Two main goals of diabetes education (Funnell, et al., 2008; Plodnaimuang, 1999). • Support Patients with diabetes: • Decision-making • Self-care behaviors • Problem-solving • Active collaboration with the health care team • Improve their diabetes outcomes: • Clinical outcomes • Health status • Quality of life

  7. Background: Diabetes Management • Empirical evidences support factors to improve the education outcomes • Involving patients in their own care • Guiding them in actively learning about the disease • Exploring their feeling about having behavior to control their own health outcomes • Thus, one of the goals for diabetes education is to improve their individual’s self-efficacy , accordingly, their self-management behavior.

  8. Background : Self-efficacy • A major construct of the Social Cognitive Theory • “ People’s judgments of their capacities to do something” • When individuals’ perceptions of their abilities to perform health behaviors are high, they likely will be more successful in changing health behaviors to decrease their risk of illness

  9. Background: Self-Efficacy & Diabetes management • A strong predictor of self-care behaviors (Hurley & Shea, 1992 ; Sigurardottir, 2005) • Associated with self-managements (e.g. diet, exercise, SMBG, and foot care) • Thailand: • Among older adults : positive self-efficacy & general self-care behavior • Type 2 diabetes: • Self-efficacy has been shown not only to be important in managing diabetes, but also to predict their self-care behaviors

  10. Person The older adults with type 2 diabetes Behaviors *Diet *Exercise *Medication *Monitoring complications • Outcome • *Normal Blood glucose • Lower HbA1c Perceived Self-efficacy “I think I’m able to select the right food” Outcome expectations “If I have the right food, my blood sugar will improve.” Sources of Self-efficacy *Performance accomplishments *Vicarious experiences *Verbal persuasion *Physiological feedback Theoretical Framework

  11. Significance • A necessary step was to develop a valid &reliable diabetes management self-efficacy instrument for Thai older adults with type 2 diabetes • The Thai Version of the Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale (T-DMSES) • This instrument can be used to: • Guide behavioral & educational interventions aimed at improving older adults’ diabetes self-management

  12. Purpose of the Study

  13. Research Questions 1. How was the content validity of this instrument established by the judgment of a panel of experts? 2. How much did the data support the desired validity of this instrument, including factor analysis, convergent validity & concurrent validity? 3. How much did the data support the desired reliability of this instrument, including internal consistency & test-retest reliability?

  14. Methodology • Two phases derived from procedures of DeVellis (2003) • Phase I : Instrument development • Phase II: Instrument psychometric properties • Validity • Reliability

  15. Phase I: Instrument development • Two steps • Instrument formation • Define the concept • Perceived Self-efficacy of Type 2 diabetes • Review the existing instruments • Blindly back translation

  16. Instrument Formation:Definition of Perceived Self-efficacy of Type 2 diabetes • Judgments of the older adults with type 2 diabetes on their own capacities related to situational behaviors, and their confidence to perform the diabetes management activities. • Three domains based on diabetes self-care activities (Pennings-van der Eerden, 1992) • Performing essential activities for treatment of diabetes • Self-monitoring • Self-regulation

  17. Review the Existing Instruments

  18. Diabetes Management Self-Efficacy Scale: DMSES(van derBijl, van Poelgeest-Eeltink & Shortridge-Baggett, 1999) • A domain-specific instrument • Diabetes self-care activities with a central place in self-efficacy • Three domains with 20 items • All items are objective & easy to understand • Well established psychometrics • (CVI = .78; Cronbach’sα = .81; test-retest = .79) • Has been well used cross culturally • Australia/Turkey/Taiwan

  19. 1. Initial translation by first 2 bilinguals, independently 2. Synthesis of translation Panel discussion Semantic Testing by 3 native speakers 3. Blindly back translation by a bilingual The 2nd draft of T-DMSES Back Translation Method The original English version of DMSES The 1st draft of T-DMSES The English back- translated version of DMSES

  20. Back Translation Method (cont.) 4. Expert Consulting For content validity The 3rd draft of T-DMSES The 2nd draft of T-DMSES 5. Pilot Study 10 Thai older adults with type 2 diabetes The Final T-DMSES Psychometric testing With 209 Thai older adults with type 2 diabetes

  21. Phase II :Instrument psychometric properties • Survey Study • To evaluate psychometrics of the T-DMSES • Validity • Reliability

  22. Sample • Participants from 8 hospitals in 4 parts of Thailand selected from 2 provinces in each part • Convenient sampling • Inclusion Criteria • Type 2 diabetes • Age ≥ 60 years old • Attendance in out-patient diabetic clinics during October-December 2007 • Exclusion Criteria • Cognitive impairment (Thai Mental State Exam < 24)

  23. Data Collection Procedure

  24. Data Analysis

  25. Results

  26. Semantic Equivalence of the T-DMSES

  27. Participant Characteristics • n = 209 • North 26 % • Lampang 27 • Phayao 28 • Northeast 26 % • Lopburi 28 • Ayuthaya 27 • Central 26 % • KhonKaen 27 • SiSaket 27 • South 22 % • SuratThani 17 • Phangnga 28

  28. Demographic Characteristics

  29. Demographic Characteristics

  30. Duration of Diagnosis, Co-morbidity, & Health Problem

  31. Content Validity of T-DMSES (20 items) • Eliminating one item • Item 13 (follow diet) & 14 (adjust diet) : same word in Thai language “control” • Adding one item • Vision Problem : : the most chronic complication of diabetes in older adults • Item-level Content Validity Index (I-CVI) I-CVI = .80 – 1 • Scale-level Content Validity Index (S-CVI) S-CVI = .96

  32. Exploratory Factor Analysis • Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin (KMO) measure was .92. • Bartlett’s test of Sphericity was highly significant • (χ2 [190], n=209) =3544.75, p < .0001 • EFA after extraction • A three factor solution explained 69% of the variance. • Item Analysis: • From the R-matrix: inter-item correlation • Item 4 (choose the right food) & item 5 (choose variation in nutrition) redundancy • Item 4 more meaning & understandable • 19 items remained in the T-DMSES

  33. Names & Descriptions of Factors Fator1: Diet & exercise (10 items)

  34. Factor 2: Self-monitoring/regulating(6 items)

  35. Factor 3 : Essential activities for medical treatment(3 items)

  36. Confirmatory Factor Analysis • 19 items were structured into a three factor model • To confirm the hypothesized factor structure of the T-DMSES • CFA • Modifying the model by adding parameter relationship based on the modification indexes (MI)

  37. Confirmatory Factor Analysis

  38. Results: Validity & reliability

  39. Discussion The T-DMSES • EFA suggested a three factor model • diet and exercise, self-monitoring/regulating , and essential activities for medical treatment • Comparisons • The original DMSES with 4 factors (venderBijl, et al., 1999) • The Turkish version of the DMSES with 3 factors (Kara, van derBijl, Shortridge-Baggett, Asti, & Erguney, 2006) • The Chinese version of the DMSES with 4 factors (Wu, 2008)

  40. Discussion: EFA (cont.) • The 3- factor model of the T-DMSES differed from others. • Modified by changing, eliminating, and adding • The T-DMSES has clear three clusters of self-care activities which patients with type 2 diabetes have to perform to prevent short & long term complications.

  41. Discussion: Convergent validity • A significantly positive correlation between the T-DMSES (specific self-efficacy) & the T-GSES (global self-efficacy): Same construct but differ in the scope • The result was similar to the previous studies: • The Australian/English version of the DMSES & GSE scale with r = .52, p < .01(McDowell, et al, 2005) • The Chinese version of the DMSES & the Chinese version of GSE scale with r = .55, p < .01 (Wu, 2008)

  42. Discussion:Concurrent Validity • This result provided the evidence of the positive correlation between T-DMSES (judgment of capability) & T-RSES (judgment of self-worth): different construct but same phenomenon • Evidences from meta-analysis (75 studies) supported the positive correlation between self-efficacy & self-esteem with ρ = .85 (Judge, et al., 2002). • Among diabetes, there was a positive relationship between self-efficacy & self-esteem (Crabtree, 1986; Grossman, Brink, & Hauser, 1987). • Among older adults, there were positive correlations among perceived self-efficacy, self-esteem, and self-care behavior (Homnan, 1996).

  43. Discussion : Test-retest reliability • ICC was at acceptable level for a new instrument (ICC = .69; p< .01, 95% CI: .54-.80). • Possible reasons: • Aging is one of the common sources of bias & error in test-retest situations (Strauss, Sherman, & Spreen, 2006). • Participants had to do retest by themselves or with family, lack of understanding. • Retested by mail • Typical of the experience with older adult populations (Andresen, Bowley, Rotheenberg, Panzer, & Katz, 1996) • One’s sense of self-efficacy is determined by an array of personal, social and environmental factors (Bandura, 1986).

  44. Conclusion • The T-DMSES with 3 subscales has acceptable validity and reliability. • The T-DMSES can be used to identify self-efficacy of Thai older adults with type 2 diabetes.

  45. Limitations • Generalization was limited: • Majority of the participants were educated. • 30 % of Thai older adults have never attended school • Older adults with a short-DM • Most of Thai older adults with type 2 diabetes were diagnosed as a long-DM • Using the same data to conduct the CFA

  46. Implications Nursing Practice • The T-DMSES with 3 subscales can be used to: • Help HCP in assessingpatients’ self-efficacy in the management of their diabetes • Guide interventions to improve knowledge and skills in areas where self-efficacy is low. • Evaluate the effectiveness of interventions targeted at improving self-efficacy among the older adults with type 2 diabetes.

  47. Future research • Closer examination of the individual items & some modifications of the model is likely needed to improve its ‘goodness-of-fit.’ • Larger sample size to conduct factor analysis both EFA & CFA in separate group of data • Using to predict performance of diabetic self-care behaviors • (e.g. diet, exercise, and medication-taking behavior). • Testing the instrument in older adults with long -DM, less education

  48. KhopKhunMakKha (Thank you so much)

  49. Supplemental Information • ICC • Limitations of Pearson’s Product-Moment correlation • Why did I choose the SCT? • Why did I choose type 2 diabetes? • Related concepts • Power Analysis to determine SS • Bilingual participant • General Self-efficacy Scale (GSES) • Rosenberg’s Self-esteem Scale

  50. ICC • Model 1 • One-way random effect model. • The sources of errors cannot be separated & are pooled. • Rater is viewed as measurement error. • Model 2 • Two-way random effect model • Sources of errors can be separated • Rater & subject as random effects • Model 3 • Two-way mixed model • Rater are seem as fixed effect • Subject/targets are a random effect

More Related