Abstract

BackgroundExisting paediatric oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) measures are generic instruments designed to evaluate a range of oral conditions. It has been found that disease-specific measures may be more adept at detecting subtle changes which occur following treatment of the condition in question. Furthermore, existing self-report OHRQoL measures have not involved children at all stages of development of the measure. The aim of this study was to develop a caries-specific measure of quality of life for children.MethodsThe first stage of the study involved a qualitative enquiry with children, aged 5–16 years, to inform the development of the measure. Children generated the potential items, contributed to item reduction and questionnaire design and participated in the testing of face and content validity. The resulting measure was evaluated in a cross-sectional validation study. Ethical approval was granted for the study.ResultsThe qualitative study found that children discussed a number of caries-related impacts which affected their daily lives. These were incorporated into a draft measure which was further refined following testing of face and content validity. This resulted in the production of the Caries Impacts and Experiences Questionnaire for Children (CARIES-QC), comprising 16 items and one global question. Two hundred participants with a mean (range) age of 8.1 (5–16) years took part in the further evaluation of CARIES-QC. Four items, which did not fit the Rasch model, were removed from further analysis. The remaining 12 items demonstrated good internal consistency (alpha = 0.9) and the total score showed significant correlations with the number of decayed teeth, presence of pain, pulpal involvement, the Child Perceptions Questionnaire (16-item short form) and the global score (p < 0.01, Spearman’s rho).ConclusionIn conclusion, children’s input allowed the development of a valid and reliable child-centred caries-specific quality of life measure. CARIES-QC can now be used to evaluate which interventions for dental caries are most effective in reducing impacts from the child’s perspective.

Highlights

  • Existing paediatric oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) measures are generic instruments designed to evaluate a range of oral conditions

  • A recent systematic review reported that approximately 621 million children have untreated dental caries [1]

  • Stages 5, 6 and 7: Validity, reliability and responsiveness Of those who were approached to participate in this stage, only one child declined, giving a response rate of 99%

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Summary

Introduction

Existing paediatric oral health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) measures are generic instruments designed to evaluate a range of oral conditions. Findings from previous studies using oral health-related quality of life measures (OHRQoL) have shown that children with dental caries frequently report functional impacts such as difficulty eating, drinking and pain when brushing teeth [2,3,4,5,6]. In addition to these functional concerns, children with caries report wider psychosocial impacts related to smiling, Gilchrist et al BMC Oral Health (2018) 18:202 playing, difficulty sleeping or relaxing, emotional/social wellbeing and schoolwork [2, 3, 7]

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