1.Individual and Environmental Factors Influencing Questionable Development among Low-income Children: Differential Impact during Infancy versus Early Childhood.
Gyungjoo LEE ; Linda MCCREARY ; Mi Ja KIM ; Chang Gi PARK ; Soo YANG
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2012;42(7):1039-1049
PURPOSE: From the holistic environmental perspective, individual and environmental influences on low-income children's questionable development were identified and examined as to differences in the influences according to the child's developmental stage of infancy (age 0-35 months) or early childhood (age 36-71 months). METHODS: This study was a cross-sectional comparative design using negative binominal regression analysis to identify predictors of questionable development separately for each developmental stage. The sample was comprised of 952 children (357 in infancy and 495 in early childhood) from low-income families in South Korea. Predictors included individual factors: child's age and gender; proximal environmental influences: family factors (family health conditions, primary caregiver, child-caregiver relationship, depression in primary caregiver) and institution factors (daycare enrollment, days per week in daycare); and distal environmental influences: income/resources factors (family income, personal resources and social resources); and community factors (perceived child-rearing environment). The outcome variable was questionable development. RESULTS: Significant contributors to questionable development in the infancy group were age, family health conditions, and personal resources; in the early childhood group, significant contributors were gender, family health conditions, grandparent as a primary caregiver, child-caregiver relationships, daycare enrollment, and personal resources. CONCLUSION: Factors influencing children's questionable development may vary by developmental stage. It is important to consider differences in individual and environmental influences when developing targeted interventions to ensure that children attain their optimal developmental goals at each developmental stage. Understanding this may lead nursing professionals to design more effective preventive interventions for low-income children.
Caregivers
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Child
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Child Day Care Centers/utilization
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*Child Development
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Child Rearing
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Child, Preschool
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Cross-Sectional Studies
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Family Health
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Female
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Health Status
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Humans
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Infant
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Infant, Newborn
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Male
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Poverty
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Regression Analysis
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Risk Factors
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Social Environment
2.Psychometric Properties of the Korean Version of the HIV Self-Management Scale in Patients with HIV.
Gwang Suk KIM ; Sang Hui CHU ; Yunhee PARK ; Jun Yong CHOI ; Jeong In LEE ; Chang Gi PARK ; Linda L MCCREARY
Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing 2015;45(3):439-448
PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to examine validity and reliability of Webel and colleagues' HIV Self-Management Scale when used with a Korean sample. METHODS: The original 20-item HIV Self-Management Scale was translated into Korean using translation and back-translation. Nine HIV nurse experts tested content validity. Principal component analysis (PCA) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) of data from 203 patients was used to test construct validity. Concurrent validity was evaluated using correlation with patients' self-rating as a "smart patient" measured using a visual analogue scale. Internal consistency was tested by Cronbach's alpha coefficients. RESULTS: All items were rated as having satisfactory content validity. Based on PCA and consideration of conceptual meaning, a three-factor solution was selected, explaining 48.76% of the variance. CFA demonstrated the adequacy of the three-domain structure of the construct HIV self-management: daily self-management health practices, social support and HIV self-management, and chronic nature of HIV self-management. Goodness-of-fit indices showed an acceptable fit overall with the full model (chi2/ df(164)=1.66, RMSEA=0.06, SRMR=0.05, TLI=0.91, and CFI=0.92). The Korean version of the HIV Self-Management Scale (KHSMS) was significantly correlated with patients' self-rated smart patient (r=.41). The subscale Cronbach's alpha coefficients ranged from .78 to .81; alpha for the total scale was .89. CONCLUSION: The KHSMS provides a valid and reliable measure of self-management in Korean patients with HIV. Continued psychometric testing is recommended to provide further evidence of validity with this population.
Adult
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Female
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HIV Infections/*psychology
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Humans
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Principal Component Analysis
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Program Evaluation
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Psychometrics
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Republic of Korea
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*Self Care
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Surveys and Questionnaires
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Translating
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Young Adult