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Original Article
13 (
2
); 196-203
doi:
10.1055/s-0041-1742232

Development and Validation of Structured COVID Perception Interview Guide (COPING) for Assessing the Acute Impact of COVID-19 Diagnosis

Department of Psychiatry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India
Department of Community and Family Medicine, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India
Department of Radiodiagnosis, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, India
Address for correspondence Roshan Sutar, MD Department of Psychiatry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh India roshidoc@yahoo.co.in
Licence
This is an open access article published by Thieme under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonDerivative-NonCommercial License, permitting copying and reproduction so long as the original work is given appropriate credit. Contents may not be used for commercial purposes, or adapted, remixed, transformed or built upon. (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)
Disclaimer:
This article was originally published by Thieme Medical and Scientific Publishers Pvt. Ltd. and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.

Abstract

Abstract

Objective Structured COVID Perception INterview Guide (COPING) is a novel tool developed to understand the acute impact after receiving the diagnosis of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in the Indian setting. The approach carries importance for interviewing patients in a state of shock immediately after receiving the diagnosis of COVID. The tool is developed emphasizing the grief, stigma, and acute psychological perception in the immediate aftermath of receiving the positive test results of COVID-19. Since COVID-19 is characteristically different from other infectious illnesses, a structured interview guide could help to address the concerns related to acute loss of health.

Materials and Methods This study follows a mixed method design conducted from August 2020 to January 2021. In-depth telephonic interviews with mild to moderate COVID patients admitted to a tertiary hospital in central India was followed by development of COPING questionnaire.

Statistical Analysis Item-Content Validity Index (I-CVI) and Scale-Content Validity Index Universal Agreement (S-CVI/UA) was computed. Factor analysis, Bartlett's test, and Kaiser–Meier–Olkin measure of sampling adequacy was performed. Principal component analysis, scree plots, and parallel analysis with varimax rotation was used to determine the number of factors to extract. For measuring internal consistency, Cronbach's α was computed.

Results Out of 40 items, the final tool had 15 items after computing content validity, performing factor analysis and achieving desired level of internal consistency (Cronbach's α = 0.702). Five domains identified after factor analysis were awareness, grief/bereavement, stigma, social reciprocity, and stress adaptation/coping.

Conclusion COPING is a valid and reliable interview guide for Indian setting that will allow the assessment of perception of patients with acute COVID-19 infection. Taking into consideration the mental health implications of COVID-19, the availability of such a validated and reliable tool is a timely step to address the public health problem and assist the ongoing research on COVID-19 and similar illnesses in the future.

Keywords

COPING
mental health
validation
COVID-19
India
stigma
tool

Introduction

The entire world has seen the rapid spread of pandemic due to novel coronavirus -19 over the year and half.1 2 3 4 5 6 As per the World Health Organization, in India, between January 3, 2020 and August 12, 2021 there were 32,036,511 confirmed cases of coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) with 429,179 deaths.7 8 Infection rates and acute psychological effects after testing positive for COVID-19 are significant despite various measures taken in India to contain the spread of the virus including stepwise lockdown, social distancing, and strict personal hygiene.9 10 11 The immediate state of shock resulting from the diagnosis of COVID-19 is multidimensional and involves acute loss of health (grief), anticipation about course of illness, doubts regarding results of the test, ruminations about close contacts, the perceived guilt of social victimization, fear of quarantine/isolation, the stigma of illness, and the anxiety of losing occupation.12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 The evidence supporting the effective control of the pandemic rests on individual responsible behavior that in turn is affected by the person's mental status immediately after testing positive for COVID-19.20 21 22 The process of bereavement depends on the resilience of an individual including psychological acceptance of the test results and coping mechanism toward accepting the treatment protocol.23 24 25 26 The disturbed mental status of an individual is further exaggerated if the concerns are not addressed through reliable information instantly along with handling and acknowledging the emotional turmoil during the spread of COVID-19 infection before the test results are declared.27 28 What happens to the mental status of people immediately after testing positive for COVID-19 is an unexplored area so far and requires systematic exploration. The consultation-liaison psychiatry teams at general hospitals have been working with mental health concerns of patients with COVID-19 and are trying to identify issues beyond depression and anxiety disorders. The exploration of the mental status of such individuals requires a gentle approach with a structured interview to address the unawareness, guilt, stigma, psychological trauma, coping, and grief associated with COVID-19.

Understanding the perception of positive test results of COVID-19 is an important but underrecognized area of research. Currently, there are no interview guides available that can help us to understand their trajectory of mental health. It is, therefore, paramount to understand the acute mental status of such individuals and attempt to make an interview guide in the Indian setting.

Materials and Methods

A mixed-method design was adopted. The initial set of items was generated through in-depth interviews and the items generated were tested through content validity. The final structured tool was factor analyzed which comprised the quantitative aspect.

Qualitative Aspect

The research protocol was approved by the institutional ethics committee (IM0276). The data collection process was done between August 2020 and January 2021. A list of subjects with contact details, meeting the inclusion criteria was collected from the acute infection ward by one of the investigators. We followed the Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research for reporting the findings of the in-depth interviews.

Qualitative Approach and Research Paradigm

Grounded theory was used for the initial 10 in-depth telephonic interviews (Supplementary Table S1 [available in the online version only], Fig. 1) along with a thorough literature search for the generation of the initial 40 items in the tool (Supplementary Table S2, available in the online version only). Grounded theory befittingly assisted in the creation of items based on the discussions with the recently diagnosed COVID-19 patients. Grounded theory with symbolic interactionism research paradigm was used as it is one of the finest ways to elucidate the interaction of actions to settings.

Fig. 1 Steps conducted for tool validation.

Fig. 1 Steps conducted for tool validation.

Researcher Characteristics and Reflexivity

Research team members who conducted in-depth interviews involved one psychiatrist and three nonpsychiatrist researchers trained for neutral interview techniques. Interviewing and data collection were done by nonpsychiatrist researchers. This ensured that their profession, experiences, or prior assumptions do not influence the interactions with participants. All the telephonic interviews were scheduled keeping in view the convenience of the participants and researchers. The interview varied from 35 to 70 minutes.

Interview Site and Setting

The in-depth interviews were conducted telephonically with participants admitted in a hospital setting considering the safety protocols and social distancing norms.

Sampling Strategy

We conducted 10 in-depth interviews. Due to thematic saturation, no further sampling was required. Few narratives are described in Supplementary Fig. S1, available in the online version only.

Data Collection Methods, Instrument, and Processing

The interviews were conducted using interview guides (Supplementary Table S1, available in the online version only) and were recorded with help of smartphone recorders. All the verbatims were transcribed in Hindi language. The confidentiality of the participants was maintained by allocating Unique Identification Numbers to each participant. Three separate researchers read and reread the transcripts to generate themes and codes to be incorporated as items in the tool. This was further triangulated with an exclusive literature review.

Unit of Study

All COVID-19 patients (reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction confirmed in the past 48 hours) with asymptomatic/mild and moderate to severe nature of the disease, who were aged above 18 years were included in the study. We excluded patients who required oxygen therapy/intensive care/inotropes and/or were pregnant.

Quantitative Aspect

The responses to the items were on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree to 5 = strongly agree). Content Validity Ratio (CVR), Item-Content Validity Index (I-CVI), and Scale-Content Validity Index/Universal Agreement (S-CVI/UA) were calculated from the responses of eight subject experts (psychiatrists and physicians). After this process, the 40-item tool was reduced to 28 items (based on scoring in Supplementary Table S2, available in the online version only) which were applied online through emails and WhatsApp numbers using an online link through the KoBo Toolbox. An online informed consent was obtained by three researchers from the department of psychiatry. The team monitored and supervised the data collection process and maintained a separate log of patients who denied consent. Participants who were denied initially were given an opportunity for the second time.

KoBo Toolbox permits to availability of the features publicly or with limited users based on the choice of the researcher (GNU licensed). This is an open-source, smartphone-based data collection tool that can also be operated on a desktop. The researcher/organization can use the services by creating a free account (https://www.kobotoolbox.org/privacy/).

Factor analysis, reliability analysis, and construct validity were computed from the responses of 112 study participants which reduced the tool further to 15 items divided into 5 broad categories, namely, awareness, grief/bereavement, stigma, social reciprocity, and stress adaptation/coping.

  • Step 1: Identification of a domain

It was done to enable the process of item generation by a specification of domain boundaries. Domains were identified after 10 in-depth interviews of prospective scale users (inductive method) and literature review (deductive method).

  • Step 2: Calculating CVR

After identification of domain and generation of items, CVR was estimated by opinion from 8 subject experts (Supplementary Table S3, available in the online version only) using the formula CVR = (Ne-N/2)/(N/2) where an item with a value above 0.75 was considered. Here, Ne was the number of experts indicating an item as essential and N was the total number of experts. Lawshe Table was referred for a cutoff value of 0.75 for 8 panelists (Supplementary Table S4, available in the online version only).

  • Step 3: Calculation of I-CVI

After the computation of CVR, I-CVI was calculated using the formula I-CVI = (No. of experts giving score 3 or 4 for relevancy)/Total no. of experts. Items with I-CVI more than 79% were considered as “Appropriate items,” between 70 and 79% were items in which minor revisions were required, and items with I-CVI less than 70% were eliminated (Supplementary Table S5, available in the online version only).

  • Step 4: Computation of S-CVI/UA

Following this, S-CVI/UA was calculated using the formula S-CVI/UA = No. of items with CVI = 1/Total no. of items.

  • Step 5: Factor analysis

Factor analysis was conducted for the 28 items finalized based on CVI. Here, the 112 scale users rated each of the 28 items on a 5-point Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree, 2 = disagree, 3 = don't know, 4 = agree, 5 = strongly agree). After this Bartlett's test, Kaiser–Meier–Olkin measure of sampling adequacy (KMO MSA) was conducted. This was followed by the scree test and parallel analysis. Lastly, the factors were described based on the varimax rotation.

  • Step 5: Reliability analysis

Following this, internal consistency was measured using Cronbach's α statistics. This calculated the degree to which the responses are consistent across the items in each of the categories of factors. Reliability was computed with consideration of item deletion.

Statistical Analysis and Results

A total of 291 patients were contacted and 112 consented to participate in the research. The reasons for the exclusion of 179 subjects were unavailability of cellular networks, deterioration of illness, and inability to use smartphones (Fig. 2).

Fig. 2 Log of patients who could not be included in the study.

Fig. 2 Log of patients who could not be included in the study.

The sociodemographic details of the 112 study participants are described in Table 1.

Table 1
Sociodemographic details of study participants

Category

Subcategory

Number

Percentage

Gender

Male

79

70.5

Female

33

29.5

Age (y)

25 or less

25

22.3

26–50

54

48.2

51 or above

33

29.5

Area

Urban

95

84.8

Rural

17

15.2

Occupation

Student

14

12.5

Service

37

33

Laborer

12

10.7

Homemaker

18

16.1

Other

31

27.7

Out of 112, the majority of the study participants was male (70.5%) and belonged from urban areas (84.8%). About 48.2% were aged between 26 and 50 years. Around 33% were in service (either government or private).

Based on in-depth interviews and literature review 40 items were generated of which 5 had CVR below 0.75 and hence were discarded (Supplementary Table S3, available in the online version only). Out of 35 remaining items, 7 were eliminated as they had I-CVI less than 70% (Supplementary Table S5, available in the online version only). Thus, the total items were reduced to 28 after this step. Twenty-three of the 28 items had I-CVI equal to100% or a value of one. The remaining five items were in the range of “Appropriate” which were revised after consultation and changes suggested by the experts. After calculation of I-CVI, S-CVI/UA was calculated which was 82.1%. All the items were scored as “strongly disagree = 1, disagree = 2, neutral/undecided = 3, agree = 4, and strongly agree = 5.” Further to maintain the robustness of the tool we reverse coded the items with positive connotation using the “transform into same variable command” in Statistical Package for the Social Sciences version 17 (SPSS-17). Factor analysis was conducted as Bartlett's test was found to be significant (< 0.001) depicting that it is suitable for the matrix to factor analyze and inferring that the correlation matrix differed significantly from the identity matrix. KMO MSA (for factoring above the value of 0.50) was performed. The KMO MSA value was above 0.50 (equal to 0.664) indicating the matrix is suitable for factoring (Table 2).

Table 2
KMO and Bartlett's test

Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin measure of sampling adequacy

0.664

Approx. chi-square

968.334

Bartlett's test of sphericity (df)

378

Significance

0.000

Abbreviations: df, degree of freedom; KMO, Kaiser–Meyer–Olkin.

Scree plot suggested that close to factors 4 and 5, the data can be summarized as there is evident leveling after factor 5 (Fig. 3). Based on the parallel analysis we used a 5-factor solution which was categorized using varimax rotation. Based on factor analysis, a total of eight items were removed (item number 1, 2, 4, 17, 20, 22, 23, 26). Now 28 items were reduced to 20 items (Supplementary Table S6, available in the online version only). The desired level of consistency (Cronbach's α = 0.702) was obtained by deletion of items 14, 21, 6, 5, and 7 (Supplementary Table S7, available in the online version only). Thus, the final tool had 15 items (Supplementary Table S8, available in the online version only).

Fig. 3 Screen plot.

Fig. 3 Screen plot.

Description of Five Broad Categories Based on Factor Analysis

  1. Awareness: An individual's ability to recognize the status of COVID-19 infection, risk of transmission, recommended safety measures, and knowledge about the availability of the treatment.

  2. Grief/Bereavement: The process of emotional expression of an infected individual over time, ranging from a state of shock to acceptance of the current health status.

  3. Stigma: The level of marked discrimination associated with the infection, current health status, and internalization of societal responses.

  4. Social reciprocity: An ability of an infected individual to have a healthy and balanced interaction with his family members, relatives, peers, and colleagues concerning psychosocial responsibilities.

  5. Stress adaptation/coping: The patterns of psychological responses under stressful conditions leading to anxiety, excessive worrying, excessive spirituality, and additional personalized coping mechanisms.

Final tool (translated in the English language): Supplementary Table S9, available in the online version only.

Discussion

The present tool is a validated and reliable interview guide for interviewing and measuring the acute impact of COVID-19 infection in the Indian setting. Though a plethora of studies and reviews have examined the broader mental health aspects of the general population, health care workers, and COVID-19 patients,29 30 31 32 less attention has been paid toward the development of a tool to understand the acute impact of COVID-19 diagnosis in the Indian context. The studies done so far have focused on symptoms of depression, anxiety, stress, and trauma and thus failed to capture the subtle psychological domains that were distinctly highlighted in qualitative interviews such as awareness, grief/bereavement, stigma, social reciprocity, and stress adaptation/coping.33 34 35 36 It is also practically appropriate to not include the clinical diagnosis of new-onset depressive or anxiety disorders within 48 hours of diagnosis of COVID-19 as the tool intends to measure the different aspects of distress associated with COVOD-19. Awareness of getting infected from a particular source of infection; fear and anxiety associated with test results; the uninvited stigma associated with COVID-19 infection (unlike other infections where public disclosure is not mandatory); the process of isolation and associated loss of health; and ability to maintain social reciprocity during this process and cope up with the stress of infection were some of the key concerns captured by the COVID Perception INterview Guide (COPING) tool. Moreover, this tool apart from giving measures of psychological status is also found to be a gentle and stepwise guide for interviewing patients infected with COVID-19. Hence, it also stands true for its name—COPING.

Unlike using only one approach for the computation of content validity, the present article gives a more holistic picture by calculating CVR, I-CVI, and S-CVI/UA from the responses of eight subject experts.37 Ratings of experts for ascertaining the items representing the domain were done using a CVR threshold of 0.75 in Lawshe Table.38 Studies have reported that the I-CVI of above 0.78 and S-CVI/UA of above 0.8 (80%) indicate a good content validity.39 We eliminated the items with I-CVI below 0.70 and considered items with I-CVI above 0.78. However, few items were revised based on experts' opinions with I-CVI between 0.70 and 0.78. S-CVI/UA was satisfactory with a value above 0.8. Following this, the factor analysis was conducted which gives fair and reasonable criteria for the selection of items with optimal performance. We found that eight items should be deleted from the tool. Thus, the credible underlying constructs for the set of items were recognized using factor analysis. With the deletion of five more items, Cronbach's α of above 0.7 was achieved. Our study supported that the items can be befittingly divided into five categories which were awareness, grief/bereavement, stigma, social reciprocity, and stress adaptation/coping. The satisfactory internal consistency (Cronbach's α value of 0.702) further reinforced that the reliability of the tool was good.

Limitation

An online self-administration by subjects creates recall bias, response bias, and under-/overratings. Online reporting has limited generalizability as it is limited to subjects familiar with handling smartphones or laptops. However, considering the nature of illness and the stringent COVID-19 protocols in place, the online self-administration may be justified. Also, the application of the COPING tool is valid in a clinical setting and may not be generalized to other settings. The items of the scale may appear vague but have validity in terms of acute settings where grief is a substantial component and could help is overall interview process by providing a channel for ventilation. The findings are from a single center and there is a possibility of overfactoring due to certain items having eigenvalues more than unity, and the limited variability as being explained by the scale. Further, perception of COVID-19 can be assessed from anthropological, sociological, and community mental health perspectives which were not touched upon in the current tool. Certain items may not be measuring the mental health impact but these were prominently striking during the qualitative interviews. This tool is not intended to measure mental health disorders such as depression, anxiety, etc., but focuses on the acute and subtle psychological domains. However, for researchers interested in measuring both the dimensions, we recommend the supplementation of established tools for screening mental health disorders along with COPING tools such as versions of the Primary Health Questionnaire.

Conclusion

COPING is a unique, easy-to-use, and simple self-administered tool which can be utilized by health care professionals to understand the perception of COVID-19 among acutely infected individuals as well as assist the health care workers to interview them. The tool has a high content validity and satisfactory construct validity with good reliability. The factor analysis strengthened the tool by recategorizing items in proper domains and deleting superfluous items. Additionally, this tool being tested among individuals acutely diagnosed with COVID-19 delivers an advantage of applying among other COVID-19-like illnesses as well to understand the psychological perception of similar infection. Further, the tool is validated in Hindi language, therefore appropriate language translation is recommended for its use in different geographical settings.

Acknowledgments

We thank all the subjects who consented to this research and all the staff members who helped in coordinating the study. We also acknowledge and thank to Dr. Abhijit Pakhre, Dr. Vaibhav Ingle, Dr. Pooja Chaudhary, Dr. Parneet Kaur, and Mr. Neelesh Shrivastava for their contribution to data acquisition from few study participants.

Conflict of Interest

None declared.

Funding None.

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