A Methodology for assessing the professional development needs of nurses and midwives in Indonesia: paper 1 of 3

D Hennessy, Carolyn Hicks, A Hilan, Y Kawonal

Research output: Contribution to journalArticle

19 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Despite recent developments, health care provision in Indonesia remains suboptimal. Difficult terrain, economic crises, endemic diseases and high population numbers, coupled with limited availability of qualified health care professionals, all contribute to poor health status. In a country with a population of 220 million, there are currently an estimated 50 nurses and 26 midwives per 100,000 people. In line with government initiatives, this series of studies was undertaken to establish the training and development needs of nurses and midwives working within a variety of contexts in Indonesia, with the ultimate aim of enhancing care provision within these domains. METHODS: An established, psychometrically valid and reliable training needs instrument was modified for use within the Indonesian context. While this technique has had widespread international use in the developed world, its application for developing countries has not yet been established. The standard form consists of a biographical cover sheet and a core set of 30 items (all health-related tasks), which have to be rated along two seven-point scales. The first of these scales asks respondents to assess how important the task is to their job and the second scale is a self-assessment of respondents' current performance level of the task. By comparing the importance rating with the performance rating, an index of training need can be obtained (high importance and low performance indicating a significant training need). The modifications incorporated for use in this series of studies were a further 10 items, which were constructed following expert group and focus group discussions and a review of the relevant literature. Pilot trials with 109 respondents confirmed its feasibility and acceptability. The instrument was then administered to 524 nurses and 332 midwives across Indonesia. RESULTS: The data were subjected to a retrospective factor analysis, using a Varimax rotation and Cronbach's alpha to check the instrument's validity and reliability following modification. The results yielded six factors, which accounted for >53% of the variance, each of which had a Cronbach's alpha score of between 0.8644 and 0.7068. CONCLUSION: The results suggest that the modified instrument remained valid and reliable for use in the Indonesian nursing and midwifery context.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)8
Number of pages1
JournalHuman Resources for Health
Volume4
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2006

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