Objective: To contemporize the Attitudes About Drug Abuse in Pregnancy questionnaire, keep the length of the modified scale brief to promote use, and test the psychometric properties of the modified scale among perinatal nurses.

Design: Cross-sectional survey.

Setting: Four hospitals in the Midwestern United States.

Participants: Registered nurses who worked in perinatal units (N = 440).

Methods: We collected data from participants using survey methods. Seven experts in perinatal substance use research and clinical care informed scale modifications. We used a split-sample design involving maternal-newborn units (labor, postpartum) and newborn-focused units (NICU, pediatrics). We evaluated construct validity using factor analysis and reliability using Cronbach's alpha. We tested for differences between units using analysis of variance and Tukey's post hoc honest significant difference test of pairwise differences.

Results: The final modified scale included 13 items that loaded on one factor and showed internal consistency reliability in both samples (α = .88-.91). We found a statistically significant difference in mean score between NICU and pediatric units; however, the absolute difference was small and likely not clinically significant.

Conclusions: The Modified Attitudes About Drug Use in Pregnancy scale has initial evidence for validity and reliability, was updated to reflect current terminology in the field, and is a pragmatic tool for use in research.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jogn.2022.02.006DOI Listing

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