Volume 53 | Number 3 | June 2018

Abstract List

Maike V. Tietschert M.Sc., Federica Angeli Ph.D., Arno J. A. Raak Ph.D., Dirk Ruwaard Ph.D., Sara J. Singer M.B.A, Ph.D.


Objective

To test the cross‐cultural validity of the U.S. Patient Perception of Integrated Care () Survey in a Dutch sample using a standardized procedure.


Data Sources

Primary data collected from patients of five primary care centers in the south of the Netherlands, through survey research from 2014 to 2015.


Study Design

Cross‐sectional data collected from patients who saw multiple health care providers during 6 months preceding data collection.


Data collection

The survey includes 59 questions that measure patient perceived care integration across providers, settings, and time. Data analysis followed a standardized procedure guiding data preparation, psychometric analysis, and included invariance testing with the U.S. dataset.


Principal Findings

Latent scale structures of the Dutch and U.S. survey were highly comparable. Factor “Integration with specialist” had lower reliability scores and noninvariance. For the remaining factors, internal consistency and invariance estimates were strong.


Conclusions

The standardized cross‐cultural validation procedure produced strong support for comparable psychometric characteristics of the Dutch and U.S. surveys. Future research should examine the usability of the proposed procedure for contexts with greater cultural differences.