Author/Authors :
asghari, fariba tehran university of medical sciences - medical ethics and history of medicine research center, tehran, iran , shahvari, zahra islamic azad university of ghachsaran - school of nursing and midwifery, ghachsaran, iran , ebadi, abbas baqiyatallah university of medical sciences - behavioral sciences research center, life style institute, nursing faculty, tehran, iran , alipour, fateme tehran university of medical sciences - eye research center, farabi hospital, tehran, iran , samadi, shahram tehran university of medical sciences - imam khomeini hospital complex - department of anesthesia and intensive care, tehran, iran , bahreini, maryam tehran university of medical sciences - school of medicine - department of emergency medicine, tehran, iran , amini, homayoun tehran university of medical sciences - roozbeh hospital, school of medicine - department of psychiatry, tehran, iran
Abstract :
this study was conducted to develop and validate an instrument to measure the medical professionalism climate in clinical settings. the item pool was developed based on the tehran university of medical sciences guideline for professional conduct. the items were distributed between two questionnaires, one for health-care providers and the other for patients. to assess the construct validity of the questionnaires, 350 health-care providers and 88 patients were enrolled in the study. the reliability of the questionnaires was evaluated by calculating cronbach’s alpha and icc. at first a 74-item pool was generated. after assessing and confirming face and content validity, 41 items remained in the final version of the scale. exploratory factor analysis revealed the three factors of “personal behavior”, “collegiality” and “respect for patient autonomy” in a 25-item questionnaire for service providers and a single factor of “professional behavior” in a 6-item questionnaire for patients. the three factors explained 51.775% of the variance for service providers’ questionnaire and the single factor explained 63.9% of the variance for patients’ questionnaire. the findings demonstrated that from the viewpoints of patients and service providers, this instrument could be applied to assess the medical professionalism climate in hospital clinical settings.
Keywords :
professionalism , clinical setting , questionnaire , validation