Abstract

AimThis systematic review aimed to assess the psychometric properties of existing nursing informatics scales of competence and provide an evidence-based basis for selecting the most appropriate assessment instruments for specific populations. BackgroundInformatics competency is one of the fundamental competencies that nurses should have. Using an informatics competency assessment instrument is an effective way to identify competency gaps and develop a professional development plan to address them. However, no systematic reviews summarizing and assessing the psychometric properties of all nursing informatics competency assessment instruments exist. DesignThis study systematically reviews measurement properties using the Consensus-based Standards for the Selection of Health Measurement Instruments (COSMIN) methodology. MethodsEight electronic databases (PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, CINAHL Complete, MEDLINE, PsychInfo, China National Knowledge Infrastructure and WanFang Data) were systematically searched from inception until January 10, 2024. Methodological quality was assessed using the COSMIN Risk of Bias Checklist. We used the COSMIN criteria to summarize and rate the psychometric properties. ResultsTwenty-seven studies reported twenty-five various versions of the instruments. Eighteen instruments assessed only one to three psychometric properties. No studies report cross-cultural effectiveness/measurement invariance and measurement error. The quality of evidence for structural validity or internal consistency for the three instruments failed to satisfy the COSMIN criteria. The SANICS-C has moderate to high-quality evidence of adequate content validity and internal consistency. In the end, the SANICS-C was an A recommendation, three instruments were C recommendations and the rest were B recommendations. ConclusionThe Nursing Informatics Competencies Scale for Nursing Students, SANICS-C and ICAT can be used to assess the informatics competencies of undergraduate, graduate and doctoral nursing students, respectively. The C-NICAS-FR is recommended for the assessment of nurses’ informatics competence. The Self-Assessment Questionnaire for Nursing Informatics Competencies of Nursing Manager can be recommended for assessing nurse leaders’ informatics competencies. Future research needs to validate these instruments’ cross-cultural applicability further and comprehensively assess their psychometric properties. Along with emerging technologies, researchers should continually revisit and revise existing assessment instruments and develop instruments to assess the informatics competencies of nursing teachers.

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