Abstract

BackgroundThere has been some debate in the past as to who should determine values for different health states for economic evaluation. The aim of this study was to compare the Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) in children attending open schools (OS) and children with disabilities attending a special school (SS) and their parents in Cape Town South Africa.MethodsThe EQ-5D-Y and a proxy version were administered to the children and their parents were requested to fill in the EQ-5D-Y proxy version without consultation with their children on the same day.ResultsA response rate of over 20% resulted in 567 sets of child/adult responses from OS children and 61 responses from SS children. Children with special needs reported more problems in the "Mobility" and "Looking after myself" domains but their scores with regard to "Doing usual activities", "Pain or discomfort" and "Worried, sad or unhappy" were similar to their typically developing counterparts. The mean Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) score of SS children was (88.4, SD18.3, range 40-100) which was not different to the mean score of the OS respondents (87.9, SD16.5, range 5-100).The association between adult and child scores was fair to moderate in the domains. The correlations in VAS scores between Open Schools children and female care-givers' scores significant but low (r = .33, p < .001) and insignificant between Special School children and adult (r = .16, p = .24).DiscussionIt would appear that children with disabilities do not perceive their HRQoL to be worse than their able bodied counterparts, although they do recognise their limitations in the domains of "Mobility" and "Doing usual activities".ConclusionsThis finding lends weight to the argument that valuation of health states by children affected by these health states should not be included for the purpose of economic analysis as the child's resilience might result in better values for health states and possibly a correspondingly smaller resource allocation. Conversely, if HRQoL is to be used as a clinical outcome, then it is preferable to include the children's values as proxy report does not appear to be highly correlated with the child's own perceptions.

Highlights

  • The health of children is generally valued highly by society and is recognised as a priority for health service delivery by many organisations including the World Health Organisation

  • This finding lends weight to the argument that valuation of health states by children affected by these health states should not be included for the purpose of economic analysis as the child’s resilience might result in better values for health states and possibly a correspondingly smaller resource allocation

  • If Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) is to be used as a clinical outcome, it is preferable to include the children’s values as proxy report does not appear to be highly correlated with the child’s own perceptions

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Summary

Introduction

The inclusion of people with disabilities might lead to an inflated value for health states relevant to their disabilities as they may perceive themselves to be less disabled than do the general public [9,10]. Whereas this is a desirable state of affairs, it might negatively impact resource allocation if such values are used in cost-utility analysis. The aim of this study was to compare the Health Related Quality of Life (HRQoL) in children attending open schools (OS) and children with disabilities attending a special school (SS) and their parents in Cape Town South Africa

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