转型准备度测量中的差距:工具与概念模型的比较。

Journal of transition medicine Pub Date : 2022-07-12 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.1515/jtm-2022-0002
Katherine South, Maureen George, Arlene Smaldone
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引用次数: 5

摘要

目的:衡量过渡准备是重要的,当准备年轻人与慢性疾病成功过渡到成人护理。青少年和青年过渡准备的扩展社会生态模型(扩展SMART)提供了影响过渡准备和结果的因素的整体观点。本研究的目的是检验过渡准备工具与扩展SMART的概念一致性,以确定测量的构念的宽度和频率。方法:检索PubMed以确定测量慢性疾病过渡准备程度的观察性和实验性研究。首先对选定的工具的发展和心理测量特性进行评估。接下来,审稿人独立地将每个工具项目映射到扩展SMART结构中:知识、技能/自我效能、关系/沟通、社会心理/情感、发展成熟度、信念/期望、目标/动机。如果项目没有映射到一个构念,则通过小组讨论归纳命名一个新的构念。结果:共鉴定出74篇研究报告的TRAQ[20项]、STARx[18项]和trxantion Index[32项]3种检测工具。在各种工具中,大多数项目映射到三个构念:技能/自我效能,发展成熟度和知识。目标/动机和社会心理/情感的社会心理结构在工具中代表性不足。没有仪器映射到每个模型构造。两个新的结构:独立生活和组织。结论:在三种常用的过渡准备工具中,代表过渡准备的结构与扩展SMART(一个过渡准备的整体概念模型)差异很大,这表明过渡准备的概念化和操作化没有标准化。没有一种工具反映了过渡准备的所有概念结构,心理社会结构的代表性不足,这表明目前的工具可能提供了过渡准备的不完整测量。
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Gaps in transition readiness measurement: a comparison of instruments to a conceptual model.

Objectives: Measuring transition readiness is important when preparing young people with chronic illness for successful transition to adult care. The Expanded Socioecological Model of Adolescent and Young Adult Readiness to Transition (Expanded SMART) offers a holistic view of factors that influence transition readiness and outcomes. The aim of this study was to examine conceptual congruency of transition readiness instruments with the Expanded SMART to determine the breadth and frequency of constructs measured.

Methods: PubMed was searched to identify observational and experimental studies that measured transition readiness across chronic illnesses. Selected instruments were first evaluated on their development and psychometric properties. Next, reviewers independently mapped each instrument item to Expanded SMART constructs: knowledge, skills/self-efficacy, relationships/communication, psychosocial/emotions, developmental maturity, beliefs/expectations, goals/motivation. If items did not map to a construct, a new construct was named inductively through group discussion.

Results: Three instruments (TRAQ [20 items], STARx [18 items] and TRxANSITION Index [32 items]), reported in 74 studies, were identified. Across instruments, most items mapped to three constructs: skills/self-efficacy, developmental maturity, and knowledge. The psychosocial constructs of goals/motivation and psychosocial/emotions were underrepresented in the instruments. No instrument mapped to every model construct. Two new constructs: independent living and organization were identified.

Conclusions: Constructs representing transition readiness in three frequently used transition readiness instruments vary considerably from Expanded SMART, a holistic conceptual model of transition readiness, suggesting that conceptualization and operationalization of transition readiness is not standardized. No instrument reflected all conceptual constructs of transition readiness and psychosocial constructs were underrepresented, suggesting that current instruments may provide an incomplete measurement of transition readiness.

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