한국간호과학회

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  • ANR (Asian Nursing Research)

ANR (Asian Nursing Research)

년도별 ‘권’과 ‘호’를 선택해 주세요 (ISSN 1598-2874(38권 4호까지), ISSN 2005-3673(38권 5호부터)

본문
제목 The Adaptation of the Buddhist Death Acceptance Scale for Vietnamese Persons with Cancer
저자 : Nguyen H. Long; Sureeporn Thanasilp 게시일 : 2021년 05월 페이지 : p144~p149
저자 Nguyen H. Long; Sureeporn Thanasilp 게시일 2021년 05월 페이지 p144~p149 인쇄
파일 The Adaptation of the Thai Death Acceptance Scale for Vietnamese Persons with Cancer.pdf
키워드 attitude to death; oncology nursing; terminal care
Purpose
This study reports on selected psychometric properties of the adapted Buddhist Death Acceptance Scale (BDAS) for Vietnamese persons with cancer.
Methods
The original 13-item BDAS was developed based on Buddhist perspectives toward death and life and was translated from Thai into Vietnamese. Item content checking with five Vietnamese local experts suggested three items of the original BDAS were irrelevant in Vietnamese culture and hence should be excluded. Psychometric properties of the 10-item BDAS Vietnamese version were tested using a convenience sample of 193 Vietnamese Buddhists with cancer.
Results
The internal consistency coefficient of the scale was found to be 0.73. Exploratory factor analysis showed that the 10 items of the BDAS Vietnamese version constituted 2 factors, explaining 51.1% of the variance of death acceptance. The first factor was “acceptance of natural process of death” and the second was “preparing for death.” Both factors reflected explicitly Buddhist viewpoints toward death acceptance and were consistent with the original Thai BDAS. However, although similar factors were found, some items in the Vietnamese BDAS did not load to same factors as in the Thai BDAS.
Conclusions
The BDAS Vietnamese version provides an initial suitable measurement for death acceptance among Vietnamese Buddhists. Its availability will enable cross-cultural research to investigate death acceptance among Buddhist patients with cancer in Vietnam. However, the differences in item loadings between the Thai and Vietnamese scales suggest that further conceptual and empirical works to refine the measurement are needed.