Abstract
Study objectives
This study reports on the reliability and initial validation of a new measure, the Self-Management Questionnaire for Cystic Fibrosis (SMQ-CF), that assesses self-management behaviors used by cystic fibrosis (CF) caregivers. Monitoring and treatment behaviors for respiratory disease, malabsorption and nutrition are included. Design: The study is divided into a pilot phase for development, reliability analysis and content validation and a construct validation phase to examine the relation between SMQ-CF, patient age, and disease status. It was hypothesized that self-management behavior increases as disease severity increases and that caregivers report less self-management behavior as a child matures. Setting: Subjects were recruited from three large urban CF Centers. Participants: Primary caregivers of CF children aged 0-18 years with mild to severe disease were surveyed. Measurements and Results: The SMQ-CF is a 46-item written questionnaire using 5-point response scales. Internal consistency was high (Cronbach's α = 0.95 for the total scale). Validity is supported by the results of factor and multivariate analyses. Twelve first-order factors were identified that are consistent with conceptual item groupings. Significant relationships were demonstrated among the SMQ-CF factors, patient age and disease status. The SMQ-CF predicted 35% of the variance in patient age and NIH Clinical Score.
Conclusions
The SMQ-CF appears to be a reliable measure of self-management behavior in cystic fibrosis. The content validity and relationships with patient age and disease status support the utility of the behavioral measure for CF caregivers.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
