Development and validation of the knowledge and attitudes regarding antibiotics and resistance (KAAR-11) questionnaire for primary care physicians
Identificadores
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11940/12561
PMID: 27353468
DOI: 10.1093/jac/dkw238
ISSN: 0305-7453
ESSN: 1460-2091
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Fecha de publicación
2016Título de revista
Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy
Tipo de contenido
Artigo
DeCS
facultades de medicina | medicina preventiva | médicos de atención primaria | farmacorresistencia microbiana | educación médicaMeSH
Preventive Medicine | Drug Resistance, Microbial | Physicians, Primary Care | Schools, Medical | Education, MedicalResumen
OBJECTIVES:
The aim of this study was to develop a novel, self-administered questionnaire to identify primary-care physicians' knowledge and attitudes regarding antibiotics and resistance (KAAR).
METHODS:
The study population comprised primary care physicians. The study was conducted in five phases. Phase I consisted of a systematic review and qualitative focus-group study (n = 33 physicians), in which items were formulated so as to be measured on a continuous, visual analogue scale (VAS); in Phase II, content validation and face validity were evaluated by a panel of experts, which reformulated, added and deleted items; Phase III consisted of a pilot study on a population possessing similar characteristics (n = 15); in Phase IV, we analysed reliability by means of a test-retest study (n = 91) and calculated the intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs); and in Phase V, we assessed construct validity by applying the known-groups technique, measuring the differences between contrasting groups of physicians formed according to antibiotic prescription quality indicators (group 1, n = 156 versus group 2, n = 191).
RESULTS:
Following Phases I and II, the questionnaire contained 16 knowledge and attitude items. Participants in the pilot study (Phase III) reported no difficulty. The test-retest study (Phase IV) showed that 11 of the 16 initial knowledge and attitude items yielded an ICC > 0.5, while analysis of known-groups validity (Phase V) showed that 13 of the 16 initial items which assessed knowledge and attitudes discriminated between physicians with good and bad indicators of antibiotics prescription.
CONCLUSION:
The final 11 item KAAR questionnaire appears to be valid, reliable and responsive.
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