• J Cardiovasc Nurs · Nov 2009

    Review Comparative Study

    Measuring self-care in chronic heart failure: a review of the psychometric properties of clinical instruments.

    • Jan Cameron, Linda Worrall-Carter, Andrea Driscoll, and Simon Stewart.
    • Faculty of Health Sciences, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, Australia. S00072101@myacu.edu.au
    • J Cardiovasc Nurs. 2009 Nov 1; 24 (6): E10-22.

    BackgroundImproved self-care skills and behaviors are an important outcome of patient education and counseling. Both researchers and health professionals need to utilize instruments that are reliable and valid at measuring this outcome to advance our understanding as to the efficacy of clinical practice directed toward improving self-care.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to identify instruments that measure chronic heart failure (CHF) self-care and demonstrate their psychometric properties.MethodsA search of Medline, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature, Medline, PsycArticles, Psychology and Behavioral Sciences Collection, and PsycINFO databases elucidated studies published between January 1980 and February 2009 that measure CHF self-care. The clinical instruments selected were disease-specific measures of CHF self-care behaviors that are promoted in best practice guidelines. Only instruments that reported estimates of reliability and validity were included in this review. Psychometric properties of the instruments were evaluated according to practice guidelines.ResultsThe literature search identified 14 instruments published in peer-reviewed journals that measured constructs that predict or correlate to self-care rather than self-care itself. Only 2 disease-specific measures of self-care were identified (Self-care Heart Failure Index [SCHFI] and European Heart Failure Self-care Behavior Scale [EHFScBS]) that have undergone rigorous psychometric testing in CHF populations. Five aspects of validity had been demonstrated with EHFScBS, and 6 aspects of validity had been demonstrated with SCHFI. Two of 3 aspects of reliability have been demonstrated in both instruments.ConclusionOnly 2 reliable and valid tools have been developed to specifically measure CHF self-care. Further use of these instruments in the research arena may reduce gaps in our understanding of CHF self-care and further shape clinical practice directed at improving it.

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