了解在动物护理过程中遭遇潜在道德伤害事件后的心理结果:开发兽医专业人员道德压力-创伤后成长量表。

IF 1.1 4区 农林科学 Q3 VETERINARY SCIENCES
New Zealand veterinary journal Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-04-29 DOI:10.1080/00480169.2024.2342903
C E Connolly, K Norris
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:对兽医护理过程中遇到的潜在道德伤害事件(PMIE)进行分类,并开发一种工具来测量兽医人群在遭遇潜在道德伤害事件后的道德困扰和创伤后成长:兽医专业人员道德困扰-创伤后成长量表(MD-PTG-VP)的开发和初步评估采用了来自澳大利亚和新西兰兽医专业人员(兽医、兽医护士、兽医技师)的数据,分为三个阶段:(1)项目生成;(2)内容验证;(3)结构验证。在第一阶段,受访者(n = 46)被问及他们是否经历过六个 PMIE 中的任何一个,并要求他们指出他们经历过的未列出的任何 PMIE。在第 2 阶段,另一组受访者(n=11)对 10 个 PMIE 清单的相关性、清晰度和适当性进行评估。在第 3 阶段,第三组受访者(n=104)对最终工具进行了测试,他们还完成了创伤后应激障碍评级访谈简表(SPRINT)和压力相关成长量表简表(SRGS-SF),前者是创伤后应激的测量方法,后者是创伤后成长的测量方法。我们计算了受访者在 MD-PTG-VP 各分量表、SPRINT 和 SRGS-SF 上的得分之间的斯皮尔曼相关系数,以评估建构效度:第一阶段产生了兽医护理中遇到的 PMIE 的 10 个项目分类法。在第二阶段,兽医专业人员认为这些项目相关、清晰且适当。这些项目被纳入到开发的工具中,该工具测量接触10个PMIE的频率和影响,产生三个分量表分数(接触频率、精神痛苦和创伤后成长)。通过测量与 SPRINT 和 SRGS-SF 的相关性来评估构建有效性,结果表明其有效性令人满意:MD-PTG-VP提供了一个信息丰富的工具,可用于检查专业人员在接触动物护理中经常遇到的PMIE后的心理健康和福祉。需要进一步评估以确定人群标准,并确认反映临床表现的分数临界值:临床相关性:一旦经过充分验证,该工具可能有助于量化兽医专业人员接触PMIE的积极和消极方面的频率和强度,从而可以进行准确的人群比较,并测量随时间推移发生的变化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Understanding psychological outcomes following exposure to potentially morally injurious events in animal care: development of the Moral Distress-Posttraumatic Growth Scale for Veterinary Professionals.

Aims: To generate a taxonomy of potentially morally injurious events (PMIE) encountered in veterinary care and develop an instrument to measure moral distress and posttraumatic growth following exposure to PMIE in the veterinary population.

Methods: Development and preliminary evaluation of the Moral Distress-Posttraumatic Growth Scale for Veterinary Professionals (MD-PTG-VP) employed data from veterinary professionals (veterinarians, veterinary nurses, veterinary technicians) from Australia and New Zealand across three phases: (1) item generation, (2) content validation, and (3) construct validation. In Phase 1 respondents (n = 46) were asked whether they had experienced any of six PMIE and to identify any PMIE not listed that they had experienced. In Phase 2 a different group of respondents (n = 11) assessed a list of 10 PMIE for relevance, clarity and appropriateness. In Phase 3 the final instrument was tested with a third group of respondents (n = 104) who also completed the Short Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Rating Interview (SPRINT), a measure of posttraumatic stress, and the Stress-Related Growth Scale-Short Form (SRGS-SF) a measure of perceived posttraumatic growth. Spearman's correlation coefficients were calculated between respondent scores on each of the MD-PTG-VP subscales, the SPRINT, and the SRGS-SF to assess construct validity.

Results: A 10-item taxonomy of PMIE encountered in veterinary care was generated in Phase 1. Items were deemed relevant, clear and appropriate by veterinary professionals in Phase 2. These were included in the developed instrument which measures frequency and impact of exposure to 10 PMIE, yielding three subscale scores (exposure frequency, moral distress, and posttraumatic growth). Assessment of construct validity by measuring correlation with SPRINT and SRGS-SF indicated satisfactory validity.

Conclusions: The MD-PTG-VP provides an informative tool that can be employed to examine professionals' mental health and wellbeing following exposure to PMIE frequently encountered in animal care. Further evaluation is required to ascertain population norms and confirm score cut-offs that reflect clinical presentation.

Clinical relevance: Once fully validated this instrument may be useful to quantify the frequency and intensity of positive and negative aspects of PMIE exposure on veterinary professionals so that accurate population comparisons can be made and changes measured over time.

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来源期刊
New Zealand veterinary journal
New Zealand veterinary journal 农林科学-兽医学
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
12-24 weeks
期刊介绍: The New Zealand Veterinary Journal (NZVJ) is an international journal publishing high quality peer-reviewed articles covering all aspects of veterinary science, including clinical practice, animal welfare and animal health. The NZVJ publishes original research findings, clinical communications (including novel case reports and case series), rapid communications, correspondence and review articles, originating from New Zealand and internationally. Topics should be relevant to, but not limited to, New Zealand veterinary and animal science communities, and include the disciplines of infectious disease, medicine, surgery and the health, management and welfare of production and companion animals, horses and New Zealand wildlife. All submissions are expected to meet the highest ethical and welfare standards, as detailed in the Journal’s instructions for authors.
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