Abstract

BackgroundOutcomes of health and rehabilitation services for children and youth with disabilities increasingly include assessments of health-related quality of life (HRQoL). The purpose of this research was to 1) describe overall patterns of HRQoL, 2) examine changes in parent’s perceptions of child’s HRQoL across 18 months and 3) explore factors that predict these changes.MethodsParticipants in this study included 427 parents of children (229 boys and 198 girls) with a physically-based disability between the ages of 6 to 14 years. The Child Health Questionnaire (CHQ) was administered three times, at nine month intervals. Comparisons to the CHQ normative data were analyzed at Time 1 using t-tests, and change over time was examined using linear mixed-effects models. Possible predictors were modeled: 1) child’s factors measured by the Activities Scale for Kids, Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, and general health measured by SF-36, 2) family characteristics measured by the Impact on Family Scale and 3) environmental barriers measured by the Craig Hospital Inventory of Environmental Factors.ResultsCHQ scores of the study’s participants demonstrated significantly lower summary scores from the normative sample for both CHQ Physical and Psychosocial summary scores. On average, children did not change significantly over time for physical summary scores. There was an average increase in psychosocial health that was statistically significant, but small. However, there was evidence of heterogeneity among children. Environmental barriers, behavioral difficulties, family functioning/impact, general health and child physical functioning had negative and significant associations with physical QoL at baseline. Change in physical QoL scores over time was dependent on children’s behavioral difficulties, family functioning and environmental barriers. Environmental barriers, behavioral difficulties, family functioning/impact and general health had significant associations with psychosocial scores at baseline, but none served as predictors of change over time.ConclusionsChildren with physical disabilities differ from the normative group on parent ratings of their physical and psychosocial health. While there was little average change in CHQ scores over 18 months, there is evidence of heterogeneity among children. Factors such as environmental barriers, family functioning/impact, child physical functioning and behavioral difficulties and general health significantly influence QoL scores as measured by the CHQ.

Highlights

  • Outcomes of health and rehabilitation services for children and youth with disabilities increasingly include assessments of health-related quality of life (HRQoL)

  • This study found that the Child Health Questionnaire (CHQ) differentiated between healthy children and children with early juvenile idiopathic arthritis and was able to measure clinical changes in children with arthritis

  • Similar to previous studies, this study found that the health-related quality of life of children with physical disabilities was significantly less than typically developing children in the normative CHQ sample

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Summary

Introduction

Outcomes of health and rehabilitation services for children and youth with disabilities increasingly include assessments of health-related quality of life (HRQoL). Outcomes of health and rehabilitation services for children and youth health-related quality of life includes their functioning and participation in daily living, and the impact of their disability on the family. The Child Health Questionnaire (CHQ) is a self-administered or parent proxy assessment of physical, psychological and social health status of children 5–18 years of age [3]. We describe parents’ perceptions of their child’s health-related quality of life (HRQoL) for 427 children with physical disabilities, the change of these perceptions across an 18-month period of time and the factors that affect amount and direction of change. This measure has been shown to have good reliability, validity and discriminant validity [6,7,8], is easy to administer [6], has normative data [4,6], and has both a parent proxy version as well as a child- completed version to allow for assessment of the perspectives of children and parents [9]

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