Validation of a Short Questionnaire to Assess Healthcare Professionals’ Perceptions of Asynchronous Telemedicine Services: The Catalan Version of the Health Optimum Telemedicine Acceptance Questionnaire
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2020ISSN
1661-7827
Abstract
Telemedicine is both e ective and able to provide e cient care at a lower cost. It also enjoys
a high degree of acceptance among users. The Technology Acceptance Model proposed is based on
the two main concepts of ease of use and perceived usefulness and is comprised of three dimensions:
the individual context, the technological context and the implementation or organizational context.
At present, no short, validated questionnaire exists in Catalonia to evaluate the acceptance of
telemedicine services amongst healthcare professionals using a technology acceptance model. This
article aims to statistically validate the Catalan version of the EU project Health Optimum telemedicine
acceptance questionnaire. The study included the following phases: adaptation and translation
of the questionnaire into Catalan and psychometric validation with construct (exploratory factor
analysis), consistency (Cronbach’s alpha) and stability (test–retest) analysis. After deleting incomplete
responses, calculations were made using 33 participants. The internal consistency measured with
the Cronbach’s alpha coe cient was good with an alpha coe cient of 0.84 (95%, CI: 0.79–0.84).
The intraclass correlation coe cient was 0.93 (95% CI: 0.852–0.964). The Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin test of
sampling showed to be adequate (KMO = 0.818) and the Bartlett test of sphericity was significant
(Chi-square 424.188; gl = 28; p < 0.001). The questionnaire had two dimensions which accounted for
61.2% of the total variance: quality and technical di culties relating to telemedicine. The findings of
this study suggest that the validated questionnaire has robust statistical features that make it a good
predictive model of healthcare professional’s satisfaction with telemedicine programs.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
614 - Public health and hygiene. Accident prevention
Pages
10 p.
Publisher
MDPI
Is part of
International Journal of Environonmental Research and Public Health, 17 (7), 2202
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


