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Themed Articles and Reports: Interprofessional Informatics

Refining a self-assessment of informatics competency scale using Mokken scaling analysis

, &
Pages 579-586 | Received 20 Sep 2014, Accepted 05 May 2015, Published online: 11 Dec 2015
 

Abstract

Healthcare environments are increasingly implementing health information technology (HIT) and those from various professions must be competent to use HIT in meaningful ways. In addition, HIT has been shown to enable interprofessional approaches to health care. The purpose of this article is to describe the refinement of the Self-Assessment of Nursing Informatics Competencies Scale (SANICS) using analytic techniques based upon item response theory (IRT) and discuss its relevance to interprofessional education and practice. In a sample of 604 nursing students, the 93-item version of SANICS was examined using non-parametric IRT. The iterative modeling procedure included 31 steps comprising: (1) assessing scalability, (2) assessing monotonicity, (3) assessing invariant item ordering, and (4) expert input. SANICS was reduced to an 18-item hierarchical scale with excellent reliability. Fundamental skills for team functioning and shared decision making among team members (e.g. “using monitoring systems appropriately,” “describing general systems to support clinical care”) had the highest level of difficulty, and “demonstrating basic technology skills” had the lowest difficulty level. Most items reflect informatics competencies relevant to all health professionals. Further, the approaches can be applied to construct a new hierarchical scale or refine an existing scale related to informatics attitudes or competencies for various health professions.

Declaration of interest

The authors report no conflicts of interest. The authors alone are responsible for the writing and content of this article.

Funding

This study was supported by Wireless Informatics for Safe and Evidence-based APN Care (D11 HP07346).

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