Validity and reliability of a localized nursing assessment guide for symptoms of anxiety and depression among admitted adult cardiac Filipino patients.
- Author:
Paolo Christian G. Bautista
1
;
Bethel Buena P. Villarta
1
;
Ma. Rita V. Tamse
1
;
Tomas D. Bautista
2
;
Wilfredo II Francis T. Mina
3
;
Maria Angela A. Mabale
1
Author Information
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords: Cardiac Patients; Tool Development; Reliability; Validity
- MeSH: Anxiety; Depression
- From: Philippine Journal of Nursing 2024;94(1):12-20
- CountryPhilippines
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
One of the most commonly used tools by clinicians to identify cases of anxiety and depression in medically ill patients is the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, or the HADS Filipino version. However, there were some “gray areas” with its use, particularly for those who are in the non-psychiatric setting. Some translated items may pertain to something else which could influence patients' responses. Furthermore, local studies showed differences in the conception, understanding, and expression of depression unique to Filipino culture and could be potentially missed during the assessment. This paper determined the validity and reliability of the Anxiety and Depression Symptom Assessment Guide or ADSAto a sample of 91 adult cardiac Filipino patients in the in-patient setting.
In addition to the 29-item ADSAtool that was generated from HADS, the review of literature and other sources was also reviewed by experts from two rounds of Delphi Survey. It was written in a yes-or-no format and available in both English and Filipino versions. The tool was tested for internal consistency, intra-class and inter-item reliability. Another test used was criterion-based validity utilizing HADS to identify cases of anxiety and depression. The results showed that ADSAis highly reliable with Cronbach's alpha of 0.97, poor-to-moderate intra-class correlation (0.670 for anxiety, 0.440 for depression), and consistent/acceptable interitem correlation (0.528 for anxiety, 0.382). Both HADS and ADSAwere positively correlated with correlation coefficients of 0.667 and 0.391 (p-value<0.5) for anxiety and depression respectively. Using a cut-off score of 5, ADSA has moderate sensitivity and specificity of 72.5% and 78.4% for anxiety, and 66.7% and 64.3% for depression. Further research is needed to strengthen ADSA's validity by increasing the sample size and the multi-center sites. - Full text:20240804210655131863.pdf