Abstract

BackgroundFew studies have evaluated changes on parent–child agreement in HRQOL over time. The objectives of the study were to assess parent–child agreement on child’s HRQOL in a 3-year longitudinal study, and to identify factors associated with possible disagreement.MethodsA sample of Spanish children/adolescents aged 8–18 years and their parents both completed the KIDSCREEN-27 questionnaire. Data on age, gender, family socioeconomic status (SES), and mental health (Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire, SDQ) was also collected at baseline (2003), and again after 3 years (2006). Changes in family composition were collected at follow-up. Agreement was assessed through intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), and Bland and Altman plots. Generalizing Estimating Equation (GEE) models were built to analyze factors associated with parent–child disagreement.ResultsA total of 418 parent–child pairs were analyzed. At baseline the level of agreement on HRQOL was low to moderate and it was related to the level of HRQOL reported. Physical well-being at baseline showed the highest level of parent–child agreement (ICC=0.59; 0.53-0.65) while less “observable” dimensions presented lower levels of agreement, (i.e. Psychological well-being: ICC= 0.46; 0.38-0.53). Agreement parent–child was lower at follow-up. Some interactions were found between rater and child’s age; with increasing age, child scored lower than parents on Parents relationships and Autonomy (Beta [B] -0.47; -0.71 / -0.23) and the KIDSCREEN-10 (−0.49; -0.73 /-0.25).ConclusionsParent–child agreement on child’s HRQOL is moderate to low and tends to diminish with children age. Measuring HRQOL of children/adolescents mainly in healthy population samples might require direct self-assessments.

Highlights

  • Few studies have evaluated changes on parent–child agreement in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) over time

  • Several factors have been described as associated to the degree and direction of parent–child agreement on the children’s HRQOL, mainly in cross-sectional studies

  • The objectives of the present study were to assess parent–child agreement on HRQOL in a 3-year longitudinal study, and to analyze factors associated with these changes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The objectives of the study were to assess parent–child agreement on child’s HRQOL in a 3-year longitudinal study, and to identify factors associated with possible disagreement. A relatively high proportion of children with chronic conditions agreed with their parents while a low proportion of children scored lower (24%) and higher (32%) than their parents [8]. Some factors such as age [9], gender [10], parent’s age [11], or parental health [12,13,14] show variable, non-consistent results, while other factors such as child’s health status present more consistent results. Direction of disagreement was different according to the dimension of HRQOL analyzed [18]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call