Williams, KristineBoyle, Diane K.Herman, Ruth E.Coleman, Carissa K.Hummert, Mary Lee2017-06-072017-06-072012-01-01Williams, K. N., Boyle, D. K., Herman, R. E., Coleman, C. K., & Hummert, M. L. (2012). Psychometric Analysis of the Emotional Tone Rating Scale: A Measure of Person-Centered Communication. Clinical Gerontologist, 35(5), 376–389. http://doi.org/10.1080/07317115.2012.702648https://hdl.handle.net/1808/24408This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Clinical Gerontologist on 2012-01-01, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/07317115.2012.702648.Psychometric analysis of the Emotional Tone Rating Scale (ETRS) was completed using ratings of naïve listeners who evaluated staff-resident communication in three nursing homes. Interrater consistency was high with ICC (2, 1) for agreement = 0.95 and consistency = 0.95. Factor analysis revealed two factors—person-centered communication and controlling communication—that explained 84.8% of the variance. Person-centered communication included seven descriptors (items) with loadings ranging from 0.84 to 0.98 and a coefficient alpha of 0.98. Controlling communication included five items that loaded from −0.63 to .99 with a coefficient alpha of 0.94. These factors were negatively correlated p = −.64 and demonstrated good ranges, standard deviations, and high item-total correlations. Person-centered communication correlated with higher resident engagement in conversation in contrast to controlling communication. The ETRS provides a measure of person-centered communication that can be used to evaluate interactions between nursing staff and older adults who reside in long term care settings.CommunicationMeasurementNursing homePerson-centered carePsychometric Analysis of the Emotional Tone Rating Scale: A Measure of Person-Centered CommunicationArticle10.1080/07317115.2012.702648PMC3601757openAccess