Development Of A Brief Measure Of Communication Quality: The 5- And 10-Item Family Inpatient Communication Surveys
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Abstract
Communication quality between clinical care teams and families impacts important outcomes like satisfaction, depression, and anxiety. Assessment tools must be efficient and reliable to be useful in the clinical environment. We report the development of 5 and 10-item versions of the validated 30-item Family Inpatient Communication Survey (FICS). Data were from 364 surrogate decision makers (SDMs) for incapacitated older adults in the ICU. Most SDMs were adult children (66.8%). SDMs were 70.9% female, 68.9% white, with a mean age of 58.3. Exploratory factor analysis revealed high internal reliability for the single-factor FICS5 (α= .88) and two-factor FICS10 (α= .93). The FICS10 reliably measures two subscales: information (α= .91) and emotional support (α=.81). Good discriminant and predictive validity were demonstrated when comparing total scores to outcomes at 6-8 weeks after hospital discharge, including anxiety (correlation coefficient (ρ)= -.13; p=.0234 ), depression (ρ =-.15; p=.0076), decision regret (ρ =--.15; p=.0066), and satisfaction (ρ =-..48; p<.0001). Repeating analysis with a new sample (n=188) revealed similar results with Cronbach’s alpha ranging from .81 to .93. The FICS5 revealed significant associations (p<.05) at 6-8 weeks after discharge with distress (-.22), while the FICS10 demonstrated significant associations with distress (-.28), anxiety (-.20), depression (-.19) and decision regret (-.27). Confirmatory factor analysis indicated adequate fit (CFI: FICS5= .994, FICS10= .994; RMSEA: FICS5= .093, FICS10= .103). The FICS provides clinicians and interventionists with a reliable, low burden tool to evaluate communication quality and respond quickly, which could impact satisfaction and other important outcomes for patients and families.