Psychometric Validation of the Digital Competence Questionnaire for Nurses
Version
Published
Date Issued
2024
Author(s)
Type
Article
Language
English
Abstract
Introduction: No brief questionnaire comprising knowledge, skills, and attitudes is available to measure digital competence among clinical practice nurses.
Objective: The aim was to evaluate the structural validity and internal consistency of the Digital Competence Questionnaire (DCQ) for Clinical Practice Nurses.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted with English-speaking clinical practice nurses. Twenty-six items from an initial item pool, developed in a prior conducted Delphi Study, were included. Exploratory factor analysis for structural validity with “oblimin” rotation and a two-factor solution as well as internal consistency test using Cronbach’s alpha were conducted.
Results: Data from 185 nurses was obtained. The final questionnaire comprised of 12 items allocated to two factors: knowl edge & skills and attitude. Factor “attitude” explained 33% of the variance and factor “knowledge & skills” 24%, resulting in a cumulative explanation of the variance of 57% by both factors. Internal consistency per factor was satisfactory, with 0.81 and
0.91, respectively.
Conclusion: The DCQ for clinical practice nurses is valid and has satisfactory internal consistency. Researchers and nurse managers can use it to assess the level of digital competence among clinical practice nurses. Future psychometric validation of the DCQ for clinical practice nurses is required to allow a conclusion on the goodness of fit and reliability.
Objective: The aim was to evaluate the structural validity and internal consistency of the Digital Competence Questionnaire (DCQ) for Clinical Practice Nurses.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted with English-speaking clinical practice nurses. Twenty-six items from an initial item pool, developed in a prior conducted Delphi Study, were included. Exploratory factor analysis for structural validity with “oblimin” rotation and a two-factor solution as well as internal consistency test using Cronbach’s alpha were conducted.
Results: Data from 185 nurses was obtained. The final questionnaire comprised of 12 items allocated to two factors: knowl edge & skills and attitude. Factor “attitude” explained 33% of the variance and factor “knowledge & skills” 24%, resulting in a cumulative explanation of the variance of 57% by both factors. Internal consistency per factor was satisfactory, with 0.81 and
0.91, respectively.
Conclusion: The DCQ for clinical practice nurses is valid and has satisfactory internal consistency. Researchers and nurse managers can use it to assess the level of digital competence among clinical practice nurses. Future psychometric validation of the DCQ for clinical practice nurses is required to allow a conclusion on the goodness of fit and reliability.
Publisher DOI
Journal or Serie
SAGE open nursing
Journal or Serie
SAGE Open Nursing
ISSN
2377-9608
Volume
10
Publisher
Sage
Submitter
Golz, Christoph
Citation apa
Golz, C., Hahn, S., & Zwakhalen, S. M. G. (2024). Psychometric Validation of the Digital Competence Questionnaire for Nurses. In SAGE Open Nursing (Vol. 10). Sage. https://doi.org/10.24451/dspace/11504
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