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AIM: This paper is a report of a study to evaluate the construct validity of the four-dimensional Caring Nurse-Patient Interaction-Short Scale using confirmatory factor analysis. BACKGROUND: Validating theoretical structures of caring is an ongoing challenge in the discipline of nursing. Our previous work has contributed to this literature by the exploration of the dimensionality of the Caring Nurse-Patient Interaction Short Scale via an exploratory factor analysis. The Caring Nurse-Patient Interaction Short Scale comprises 23 items reflecting four caring domains: humanistic care, relational care, clinical care and comforting care. METHOD: A methodological study was conducted involving a convenience sample of 531 nursing students in a baccalaureate nursing programme (20% were already Registered Nurses). Data were collected in 2002 and 2004. Confirmatory factor analysis of the Caring Nurse-Patient Interaction Short Scale was performed. FINDINGS: As expected with large samples and models, the chi-squared-associated P-value was statistically significant (chi2 = 811.43, d.f. = 224, P or = 0.48 and statistically significant at the 0.01 level. CONCLUSION: The Caring Nurse-Patient Interaction Short Scale model was judged to fit the data adequately. Although further testing of the scale with different samples of patients is warranted, our model emerged as a middle-range theory during the construct validity process and still reflects Watson's theory while offering a structure that is testable in clinical research.
Cossette et al. (Thu,) studied this question.