Abstract

BackgroundThe Child Perception Questionnaire (CPQ11-14) is a self-report instrument developed to measure oral-health-related quality of life (OHRQoL) in 11-14-year-olds. Earlier reports confirm that the 16-item short-form version performs adequately, but there is a need to determine the measure's validity and properties in larger and more diverse samples and settings.AimThe objective of this study was to examine the performance of the 16-item short-form impact version of the CPQ11-14 in different communities and cultures with diverse caries experience.MethodCross-sectional epidemiological surveys of child oral health were conducted in two regions of New Zealand, one region in Brunei, and one in Brazil. Children were examined for dental caries (following WHO guidelines), and OHRQoL was measured using the 16-item short-form item-impact version of the CPQ11-14, along with two global questions on OHRQoL. Children in the 20% with the greatest caries experience (DMF score) were categorised as the highest caries quintile. Construct validity was evaluated by comparing the mean scale scores across the categories of caries experience; correlational construct validity was assessed by comparing mean scores and children's global ratings of oral health and well-being.ResultsThere were substantial variations in caries experience among the different communities (from 1.8 in Otago to 4.9 in Northland) and in mean CPQ11-14 scores (from 11.5 in Northland to 16.8 in Brunei). In all samples, those in the most severe caries experience quintile had higher mean CPQ11-14 scores than those who were caries-free (P < 0.05). There were also greater CPQ scores in those with worse self-rated oral health, with the Otago sample presenting the most marked gradient across the response categories for self-rated oral health, from 'Excellent' to 'Fair/Poor' (9.6 to 19.7 respectively).ConclusionThe findings suggest that the 16-item short-form item impact version of the CPQ11-14 performs well across diverse cultures and levels of caries experience. Reasons for the differences in mean CPQ scores among the communities are unclear and may reflect subtle socio-cultural differences in subjective oral health among these populations, but elucidating these requires further exploration of the face and content validity of the measure in different populations.

Highlights

  • The CPQ11-14 is a self-report questionnaire developed to measure oral health-related quality of life in children and adolescents [1]

  • The findings suggest that the 16-item short-form item impact version of the CPQ11-14 performs well across diverse cultures and levels of caries experience

  • Data from studies of children in New Zealand (Northland and Otago), Brunei and Brazil were used in this study

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Summary

Introduction

The CPQ11-14 is a self-report questionnaire developed to measure oral health-related quality of life in children and adolescents [1]. The original CPQ11-14 comprised 37 items organised into four health domains It is usually respondent burden were thought to limit its routine use in dental epidemiology and health services research. Jokovic and co-workers developed four shortform versions of the CPQ11-14 using two different approaches [8,9,10]. This resulted in two 8-item versions and two 16-item versions. The Child Perception Questionnaire (CPQ11-14) is a self-report instrument developed to measure oralhealth-related quality of life (OHRQoL) in 11-14-year-olds. Earlier reports confirm that the 16-item short-form version performs adequately, but there is a need to determine the measure’s validity and properties in larger and more diverse samples and settings

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