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Critical care medicine · Sep 2016
Measuring Adaptive Coping of Hospitalized Patients With a Severe Medical Condition: The Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire.
- Edwin J Boezeman, José G M Hofhuis, Aly Hovingh, Christopher E Cox, Reinout E de Vries, and Peter E Spronk.
- 1Section Social and Organizational Psychology, Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.2Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Gelre Hospital Apeldoorn, Apeldoorn, The Netherlands.3Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC.4Department of Social and Organizational Psychology, Vrije Universiteit University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.5Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Academic Medical Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
- Crit. Care Med. 2016 Sep 1; 44 (9): e818-26.
ObjectivesAdaptive coping strategies are associated with less psychological distress. However, there is no brief, specific, and validated instrument for assessing adaptive coping among seriously ill patients. Our objective was to examine the validity and patient-proxy agreement of a novel instrument, the Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire.DesignA cross-sectional design which included two related studies.SettingA single university-affiliated Dutch hospital.SubjectsHospitalized patients (study 1) and ICU-patients and proxies (study 2).InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsStudy 1 (n = 103 hospitalized patients) addressed the Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire's performance relative to questionnaires addressing similar content areas. Coping subscales of the BRIEF COPE, Illness Cognition Questionnaire, and Utrecht Coping List were used as comparator measures in testing the construct validity of the Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire-subscales (fighting spirit, toughness, redefinition, positivism, and non-acceptance). The Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire had good internal consistency (0.64 ≤ α ≤ 0.79), a clear initial factor structure, and fair convergent (0.24 ≤ r ≤ 0.50) and divergent (r, ≤ 0.12) construct validity. Study 2 examined the performance of the Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire among 100 ICU patients and their close family members. This study showed that the Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire has good structural validity (confirmatory factor analyses with Comparative Fit Index > 0.90 and Root Mean Square Error of Approximation < 0.08) and moderate (r, 0.37; non-acceptance) to strong (r, > 0.50; fighting spirit, toughness, redefinition, and positivism) patient-close proxy agreement.ConclusionsOverall, the Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire has good psychometric properties. ICU clinicians can use the Sickness Insight in Coping Questionnaire to gain insight in adaptive coping style of patients through ratings of patients or their close family members.
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