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Psychometric Properties of the Korean Version of Self-Efficacy for HIV Disease Management Skills
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Gwang Suk Kim, Layoung Kim, Mi-So Shim, Seoyoung Baek, Namhee Kim, Min Kyung Park, Youngjin Lee
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J Korean Acad Nurs 2023;53(3):295-308. Published online June 30, 2023
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.4040/jkan.23016
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Abstract
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This study evaluated the validity and reliability of Shively and colleagues’ self-efficacy for HIV disease management skills (HIVSE) among Korean participants. Methods The original HIV-SE questionnaire, comprising 34 items, was translated into Korean using a translation and back-translation process. To enhance clarity and eliminate redundancy, the author and expert committee engaged in multiple discussions and integrated two items with similar meanings into a single item. Further, four HIV nurse experts tested content validity. Survey data were collected from 227 individuals diagnosed with HIV from five Korean hospitals. Construct validity was verified through confirmatory factor analysis. Criterion validity was evaluated using Pearson’s correlation coefficients with the new general self-efficacy scale. Internal consistency reliability and test-retest were examined for reliability. Results The Korean version of HIV-SE (K-HIV-SE) comprises 33 items across six domains: “managing depression/mood,” “managing medications,” “managing symptoms,” “communicating with a healthcare provider,” “getting support/help,” and “managing fatigue.” The fitness of the modified model was acceptable (minimum value of the discrepancy function/degree of freedom = 2.49, root mean square error of approximation = .08, goodnessof-fit index = .76, adjusted goodness-of-fit index = .71, Tucker-Lewis index = .84, and comparative fit index = .86). The internal consistency reliability (Cronbach’s α = .91) and test-retest reliability (intraclass correlation coefficient = .73) were good. The criterion validity of the K-HIV-SE was .59 (p < .001). Conclusion This study suggests that the K-HIV-SE is useful for efficiently assessing self-efficacy for HIV disease management.
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Citations
Citations to this article as recorded by 
- Providing 2 Types of mHealth Interventions to Support Self-Management Among People Living With HIV: Randomized Clinical Trial
Gwang Suk Kim, Layoung Kim, Seoyoung Baek, Sooyoung Kwon, Ji Min Kim, Jun Yong Choi, Jae-Phil Choi JMIR mHealth and uHealth.2025; 13: e60905. CrossRef - Factors associated with health-related quality of life among people living with HIV in South Korea: Tobit regression analysis
Gwang Suk Kim, Layoung Kim, SangA Lee, Mi-So Shim, Youngjin Lee, Seoyoung Baek, Claus Kadelka PLOS ONE.2024; 19(5): e0303568. CrossRef - Three cycles of mobile app design to improve HIV self-management: A development and evaluation study
Gwang Suk Kim, Layoung Kim, Seoyoung Baek, Mi-So Shim, SangA Lee, Ji Min Kim, Jong Yae Yoon, Jin Kim, JunYong Choi, Jae-Phil Choi DIGITAL HEALTH.2024;[Epub] CrossRef
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Validity and Reliability of the Korean Version of the Climate, Health, and Nursing Tool
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Da Woon Jeong, Gwang Suk Kim, Min Kyung Park
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J Korean Acad Nurs 2022;52(2):173-186. Published online April 30, 2022
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.4040/jkan.21211
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Abstract
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- Purpose
Climate change has various negative effects on human health, which has resulted in increased burden on the health care system. Nurses contribute significantly to assessing climate-related health risks and creating a healthy environment. This study aimed to evaluate the reliability and validity of the Korean version of the Climate, Health, and Nursing Tool (K-CHANT) to measure nurses’ awareness, motivation, concern, and behaviors at work and at home regarding climate change and health. Methods The 22 items of English CHANT were translated into Korean with forward-backward translation techniques. Internal consistency reliability, test-retest reliability, and construct validity using confirmatory factor analysis were performed using SPSS WIN (25.0) and AMOS (26.0). Survey data were collected from 220 master’s, doctoral, and post-doctoral nursing students. Results The K-CHANT consists of 20 items across 5 domains.Two items of the original CHANT were excluded because of low content validity index and standardized regression weights. The internal consistency reliability of the K-CHANT, assessed by Cronbach’s αá was .81, with an intraclass correlation coefficient of .66~.90. The five subscales model was validated by confirmatory factor analysis (SRMR < .08, RMSEA < .08, AGFI > .70, CFI > .70). Conclusion The K-CHANT has satisfactory construct validity and reliability to measure nurses’ awareness, motivation, concern, and behaviors at work and at home regarding climate change and health. Future research should examine nurses’ perceptions and behaviors related to the health effects of climate change and develop an action plan to improve it.
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- Climate change perceptions and behaviors among Korean nurses: The role of organizational initiatives
Dukhyun Back, Kihye Han, Jieun Kim, Hyang Baek Nursing Outlook.2025; 73(3): 102383. CrossRef - Preparedness of nurses for climate change: questionnaire development and preliminary validation
Pui Hing Chau, Tiffany L.T. Yu, Yan Hu, Yasna K. Palmeiro Silva, Eileen Gilder, Michelle Cole, Roinah Ngunyulu, Chia-Chin Lin International Journal of Nursing Studies Advances.2025; 8: 100337. CrossRef - Nurses' educational needs regarding climate change and health by type of institutions: A descriptive cross-sectional study
Min Kyung Park, Gwang Suk Kim, Da Woon Jeong, Seoyoung Baek Nurse Education in Practice.2025; 87: 104473. CrossRef - İklim, Sağlık ve Hemşirelik Ölçeğinin Türkçeye Uyarlanması, Geçerlik ve Güvenirliğinin İncelenmesi
Özden Buse Yalçin, Betül Aktaş Hemşirelik Bilimi Dergisi.2025; 8(2): 231. CrossRef - Psychometric Properties of the Turkish Version of the Climate and Health Tool (CHAT) for Health Professionals: A Validity and Reliability Study
Arzu Bulut, Hande Demirtaş Evaluation & the Health Professions.2025;[Epub] CrossRef - Measuring Nurses’ Knowledge and Awareness of Climate Change and Climate-Associated Diseases: Systematic Review of Existing Instruments
Omar Portela Dos Santos, Élodie Perruchoud, Filipa Pereira, Paulo Alves, Henk Verloo Nursing Reports.2024; 14(4): 2850. CrossRef - Validation of the Sustainability Attitudes in Nursing Survey-2 for nurses: A cross-sectional study
Sophia J. Chung, Sun Joo Jang, Haeyoung Lee Nurse Education in Practice.2024; 75: 103898. CrossRef - Factors affecting environmental sustainability attitudes among nurses – Focusing on climate change cognition and behaviours: A cross‐sectional study
Sophia J. Chung, Haeyoung Lee, Sun Joo Jang Journal of Advanced Nursing.2024;[Epub] CrossRef - Nurses' Perceptions and Behaviours Regarding Climate Change and Health: A Quantile Regression Analysis
Min Kyung Park, Seoyoung Baek, Da Woon Jeong, Gwang Suk Kim Journal of Advanced Nursing.2024;[Epub] CrossRef - Exploring influences of environmental information, beliefs and self‐efficacy on nurses' climate health behaviours and their relationships
Jeongmin Yi, Yeojin Yi Journal of Advanced Nursing.2024;[Epub] CrossRef - Factors related to perceptions of climate health impact and climate action: Focusing on the Health Belief Model
Hansol Lee, Jaehee Kim, Yuri Lee Korean Journal of Health Education and Promotion.2024; 41(2): 31. CrossRef - Climate Change and Nursing
Yoomi Jung Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing.2024; 54(4): 475. CrossRef - Development and Validation of a Dignity in Care Scale of Terminally Ill Patients for Nurses
Yun Sil Ahn, Pok Ja Oh Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing.2023; 53(3): 340. CrossRef - Climate, Health, and Nursing Tool (CHANT): A confirmatory factor analysis
Anna Winquist, Elizabeth C. Schenk, Cara Cook, Shanda Demorest, Ekaterina Burduli Public Health Nursing.2023; 40(2): 306. CrossRef - Factors Influencing Nursing Graduate Students’ Perception and Behavior Related to Climate Change and Health: A Secondary Data Analysis
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Factors Influencing Health Behavior Related to Particulate Matter in Older Adults
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Min Kyung Park, Gwang Suk Kim
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J Korean Acad Nurs 2020;50(3):431-443. Published online June 30, 2020
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.4040/jkan.19201
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Abstract
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- Purpose
This study aimed to investigate health behavior related to particulate matter (PM) in older adults and examine the factors affectingit. Methods A cross-sectional survey design was used. Data were collected from 150 voluntary older adult participants from Songpa-gu inSeoul. The survey questions measured service perception and experience related to PM, risk perception related to PM, attitude toward riskof PM, and health behavior related to PM. Results The average score for health behavior related to PM was 79.37, ranging from 51 to 115.There was a significant positive correlation between health behavior related to PM and risk perception related to PM (r=.58, p <.001) as wellas between health behavior related to PM and attitude toward risk of PM (r=.70, p<.001). Multiple linear regression revealed that healthbehavior related to PM was predicted by levels of the existence of disease related to PM (β=.14, p=.019), service experience related to PM(b=.20, p=.021), risk perception related to PM (b=.20, p=.019), and attitude toward risk of PM (b=.44, p<.001). The model including thesevariables accounted for 47.0% of health behavior related to PM. Conclusion Korean older adults have the low level of health behaviorrelated to PM. The findings of this study emphasize that risk perception and attitude toward risk of PM should be evaluated, and theunderlying diseases related to PM and their service experience should be considered in developing intervention to improve health behaviorrelated to PM.
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- Development and Validation of the Dust Exposure Reduction Behavior Scale
Sung Woo Hwang, Hyun Kyoung Kim Sage Open.2024;[Epub] CrossRef - Factors Influencing Nursing Graduate Students’ Perception and Behavior Related to Climate Change and Health: A Secondary Data Analysis
Min Kyung Park, Seoyoung Baek, Da Woon Jeong, Gwang Suk Kim Korean Journal of Adult Nursing.2023; 35(1): 71. CrossRef - The association between depression and non‐compliance with COVID‐19 preventive behaviors in South Korean older adults stratified by sex
Jae Jun Lee, Namhee Kim, Min Kyung Park, Hyunju Ji, Gwang Suk Kim International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry.2023;[Epub] CrossRef - Comparative Evaluation between Particulate Matter Concentrations in Rural Villages in Wanju-gun and the Air Pollution Monitoring Network
Minji Lee, Dongphil Choi, Kyungsu Kim The Korean Journal of Community Living Science.2022; 33(1): 139. CrossRef - Effectiveness of Augmented Reality-Based Education on Fine Dust for the Elderly
Jung-Rim Huh, Kon-Joon Bhang Journal of Digital Contents Society.2021; 22(6): 979. CrossRef - An Exploratory Study on the Policy for Facilitating of Health Behaviors Related to Particulate Matter: Using Topic and Semantic Network Analysis of Media Text
Hye Min Byun, You Jin Park, Eun Kyoung Yun Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing.2021; 51(1): 68. CrossRef - Environmental Factors Related to Non-compliant Health Behaviors in Urban-Dwelling Elderly
Minkyung Park, Jisu Park, Sunhye Moon, Heejung Kim Journal of Korean Gerontological Nursing.2021; 23(4): 361. CrossRef - Factors Affecting Particulate Matter-Related Health Behaviors of Patients with Pulmonary Disease
Joohee Ham, SeungHye Choi, Smi Choi-Kwon Korean Journal of Adult Nursing.2020; 32(5): 504. CrossRef
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