Abstract

IntroductionMost of the EBP measuring instruments available to date present limitations both in the operationalisation of the construct and also in the rigour of their psychometric development, as revealed in the literature review performed. The aim of this paper is to provide rigorous and adequate reliability and validity evidence of the scores of a new transdisciplinary psychometric tool, the Health Sciences Evidence-Based Practice (HS-EBP), for measuring the construct EBP in Health Sciences professionals.MethodsA pilot study and a subsequent two-stage validation test sample were conducted to progressively refine the instrument until a reduced 60-item version with a five-factor latent structure. Reliability was analysed through both Cronbach’s alpha coefficient and intraclass correlations (ICC). Latent structure was contrasted using confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) following a model comparison aproach. Evidence of criterion validity of the scores obtained was achieved by considering attitudinal resistance to change, burnout, and quality of professional life as criterion variables; while convergent validity was assessed using the Spanish version of the Evidence-Based Practice Questionnaire (EBPQ-19).ResultsAdequate evidence of both reliability and ICC was obtained for the five dimensions of the questionnaire. According to the CFA model comparison, the best fit corresponded to the five-factor model (RMSEA = 0.049; CI 90% RMSEA = [0.047; 0.050]; CFI = 0.99). Adequate criterion and convergent validity evidence was also provided. Finally, the HS-EBP showed the capability to find differences between EBP training levels as an important evidence of decision validity.ConclusionsReliability and validity evidence obtained regarding the HS-EBP confirm the adequate operationalisation of the EBP construct as a process put into practice to respond to every clinical situation arising in the daily practice of professionals in health sciences (transprofessional). The tool could be useful for EBP individual assessment and for evaluating the impact of specific interventions to improve EBP.

Highlights

  • Most of the Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) measuring instruments available to date present limitations both in the operationalisation of the construct and in the rigour of their psychometric development, as revealed in the literature review performed

  • Since the middle of the 90s, Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) has become an increasingly important paradigm in health care, as it provides a framework for resolving problems related to everyday clinical practice

  • Shortcomings have been detected with respect to their design and development, and the processes of psychometric validation, that is, the provision of solid evidence of reliability and validity

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of this paper is to provide rigorous and adequate reliability and validity evidence of the scores of a new transdisciplinary psychometric tool, the Health Sciences Evidence-Based Practice (HS-EBP), for measuring the construct EBP in Health Sciences professionals. In order to address the shortcomings and needs pointed out in the literature, the aim of this study was to undergo a psychometric validation of a new transprofessional tool that aims to measure the EBP construct through a latent structure that is able to cover the core contents of the areas of interest included in its theoretical definition.

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