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Research articles

Characterizing intensive community-based care: use, reliability and factor structure of a generic measure

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Pages 158-171 | Accepted 17 Feb 2008, Published online: 12 May 2008
 

Abstract

Background: There is a need for a reliable measurement instrument to characterize intensive community-based care across different types of programs.

Aims: The aim of the current study was to use and test the previously developed Intensive Community-Based Care Program Components (ICPC) Questionnaire.

Method: This questionnaire was used in a census of programs throughout the Netherlands. Reliability of the a priori scales was assessed, and exploratory factor analysis was used to reduce the number of scales and to re-evaluate the structure of the questionnaire. Descriptive data were calculated to characterize Dutch programs. Of the programs, 58% responded to the questionnaire.

Results: Of the a priori scales, 70% were internally consistent. With factor analysis the number of scales was considerably reduced (73%), but still explaining 58% of the total variance.

Conclusions: This study shows that the ICPC can be used to improve future effect studies and for international comparisons of programs.

Acknowledgement

This study has been conducted in cooperation with IVO Rotterdam, The Netherlands.

Notes

1. In this study it was important to have a heterogeneous group of programs that was still comparable on certain structural characteristics; it was decided to focus on programs with comparable target populations.

2. The criteria that were recommended by Velicer and Fava (Citation1998), such as a minimum sample size and ≥3 items per factor, affect the degree to which a sample pattern reproduces the population pattern. These do not apply here, as this study included the whole population.

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