Title of article :
Psychometric properties of the Persian version of the Patient Measure of Safety (PMOS
Author/Authors :
Soltanian Ali Reza Modeling of Noncommunicable Diseases Research Center - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences - Hamadan, Iran , Sarvi Fatemeh Department of Biostatistics - School of Public Health - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences - Hamadan, Iran , Ghaffari Mohammad Ebrahim Department of Biostatistics - School of Public Health - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences - Hamadan, Iran , Eghbalian Mostafa Department of Biostatistics - School of Public Health - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences - Hamadan, Iran , Khodadost Mahmoud Department of Epidemiology - School of Public Health - Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences - Tehran, Iran , Mohammadfam Iraj Departments of Occupational Hygiene - Hamadan Medical Science University - Hamadan, Iran , Khazaei Mojtaba Department of Neurology - Hamadan University of Medical Sciences - Hamadan, Iran
Abstract :
Patient safety practice reduces the adverse events that may occur in the health care system during procedures,
diseases, and diagnoses. Failure and negligence in identifying and resolving health care system errors may result in financial and
physical harm. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the psychometric properties of the Patient Measure of Safety in Hospitals
(PMOS).
Methods: This study was conducted on 264 patients in 4 hospitals. The patient measure of safety questionnaire has 44 items and 9
domains. To translate the PMOS questionnaire, standardized forward-backward procedure was used, and a panel of experts assessed
the face and content validity of the Persian version. Internal consistency, confirmatory factor analysis (CFA), and test-retest method
were used to test the validity and reliability of the instrument. Also, AMOS (version 23) and SPSS (version 16) software were used for
data analysis and modeling.
Results: The average CVI score was 0.85, indicating well results in the Persian context. CVR score was 0.65. The indices of
goodness of fit were acceptable for Iranian sample (CFI=0.91, TLI=0.89, RMSEA=0.063, relative/normal Chi-Square Statistic
(X2/df)=2.85). All items were significantly loaded on the domains, except the 33rd and 38th items that were related to the eighth
domain. Thus, the final Persian version was developed with 8 domains and 42 items. Internal consistency was acceptable for these
domains, and test-retest method showed a good reliability (r=0.984).
Conclusions: The Persian version of PMOS is an appropriate instrument to assess the safety of patients in Persian language
communities. Also, PMOS is an optimal tool to identify and avoid preventable errors.
Keywords :
Statistical model , Validity Reliability , Patient Safety , Hospital
Journal title :
Medical Journal of the Islamic Republic of Iran