Perceptions of Justice in Clinical Learning Environments: Development and Validation of an Organizational Justice Measure for Medical Trainees

Michael J Cullen, Jessica Hane, You Zhou, Benjamin K Seltzer, Paul R. Sackett, Susan M. Culican, Krima Thakker, John Q. Young, Taj Mustapha

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Purpose This study aimed to develop an instrument to measure medical trainees' perceptions of justice in clinical learning environments. Method Between 2019 and 2023, the authors conducted a multiyear, multi-institutional, multiphase study to develop a 16-item justice measure with 4 dimensions: interpersonal, informational, procedural, and distributive. The authors gathered validity evidence based on test content, internal structure, and relationships with other variables across 3 phases. Phase 1 involved drafting items and gathering evidence that items measured intended dimensions. Phase 2 involved analyzing relevance of items for target groups, examining interitem correlations and factor loadings in a preliminary analysis, and obtaining reliability estimates. Phase 3 involved a confirmatory factor analysis and collecting convergent and discriminant validity evidence. Results In phase 1, 63 of 91 draft items were retained following a content validation exercise gauging how well items measured targeted dimensions (mean [SD] item ratings within dimensions, 4.16 [0.36] to 4.39 [0.34]) on a 5-point Likert scale (with 1 indicating not at all well and 5 indicating extremely well). In phase 2, 30 items were removed due to low factor loadings (i.e., < 0.40), and 4 items per dimension were selected (factor loadings, 0.42-0.89). In phase 3, a confirmatory factor analysis supported the 4-dimensional model (χ2 = 610.14, P <.001; comparative fit index = 0.90, Tucker-Lewis Index = 0.87, root mean squared error of approximation = 0.11, standardized root mean squared residual = 0.06), with convergent and discriminant validity evidence showing hypothesized positive correlations with a justice measure (r = 0.93, P <.001), trait positive affect (r = 0.46, P <.001), and emotional stability (r = 0.33, P <.001) and negative correlations with trait negative affect (r =-0.39, P <.001). Conclusions Results indicate the measure's potential utility in understanding justice perceptions and designing targeted interventions.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)1374-1384
Number of pages11
JournalAcademic Medicine
Volume99
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 1 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.

PubMed: MeSH publication types

  • Journal Article
  • Validation Study
  • Multicenter Study

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