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. 2021 Apr 15;10(4):441. doi: 10.3390/antibiotics10040441

Table 1.

The items in the questionnaire and content validity based on the responses from ten experts; 5-point Likert scale from strongly disagree (1) to strongly agree (5).

Item # Statement I-CVI 1 κ* 2 Interpretation 3
Part 1. Demographics
1 Sex Not applicable
2 Age Not applicable
3 Education level Not applicable
Part 2a. Awareness of antimicrobial use (5-point Likert scale)
4 Antimicrobial agents are nationally abused. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
5 Antibiotic resistance is a nationwide problem. 0.7 0.66 Good
6 Pharmacists properly check the reason to take antimicrobials, their dose and duration of use; monitor their side effects; and provide counseling regarding my antibiotics. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
Part 2b. Knowledge of antimicrobial use (yes/no items)
7 I believe anti-infectives are properly prescribed to me. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
8 I know (knew) the name of my antibiotics. 0.9 0.90 Excellent
9 I know (knew) the reason for taking my antibiotics. 1.0 1.00 Excellent
10 I know (knew) the dose of my antibiotics. 0.5 0.34 Poor
11 I know (knew) the duration of my antimicrobial therapy. 0.9 0.90 Excellent
12 I know (knew) the shape or color of my antibiotics. 0.7 0.66 Good
13 I know (knew) when to take my antibiotics. 0.9 0.90 Excellent
14 I know (knew) the adverse reactions or precautions related to my antibiotics. 1.0 1.00 Excellent
15 I know (knew) how to manage the adverse reaction caused by my anti-infectives. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
16 I know (knew) the time for the next follow-up visit after discharge from the hospital.4 0.5 0.34 Poor
Part 3. Patient need for community-based pharmaceutical care services in the outpatient antimicrobial stewardship program (5-point Likert scale)
17 The abuse of antimicrobials would be reduced by the active involvement of pharmacists in infectious disease management. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
18 Antibiotic resistance would be decreased by the active involvement of pharmacists in infectious disease management. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
19 Treatment outcomes of infectious diseases would be improved with stronger antimicrobial knowledge of pharmacists. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
20 Pharmacists’ knowledge of antibiotics is irrelevant to the effectiveness of infectious disease treatment. 0.7 0.66 Good
21 Pharmacists’ intervention helps the physician choose the appropriate antimicrobial therapy. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
22 Pharmacists’ intervention prevents excessive antibiotic prescriptions. 0.7 0.66 Good
23 Pharmacists’ intervention saves antimicrobial drug costs. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
24 Pharmacists need to validate antibiotic prescriptions and monitor resistance status continuously. 1.0 1.00 Excellent
25 Treatment outcomes of infectious diseases would be improved by pharmacy education for other healthcare professionals. 0.9 0.90 Excellent
26 Consideration of local infection prevalence and resistance patterns would improve antimicrobial treatment outcomes. 0.8 0.79 Excellent
Overall, content validity S-CVI/Average 5 = 0.8

1 I-CVI (item content validity index) = the number of experts giving a rating of 3 or 4/the number of experts. 2 κ* = kappa designating agreement on relevance: κ* = (I-CVI ‒ Pc)/(1 − Pc),where ‒ Pc (probability of a chance occurrence) = [N!/A!(N − A)!] × 0.5 N, N = number of experts, and A = number agreeing on good relevance. 3 Interpretation criteria for κ*: poor = κ* < 0.40; fair = κ* of 0.40‒0.59; good = κ* of 0.60‒0.74; excellent = κ* > 0.74. 4 Designed to be answered only by patients, who had been hospitalized previously. 5 S-CVI/Ave (average scale content validity index) = mean of I-CVI.