articleHealth and Quality of Life OutcomesJan 3, 2007GOLD OA

Parent proxy-report of their children's health-related quality of life: an analysis of 13,878 parents' reliability and validity across age subgroups using the PedsQL™ 4.0 Generic Core Scales

Texas A&M University · Scott & White Memorial Hospital

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefdoajpubmed

Abstract

Background

Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measurement has emerged as an important health outcome in clinical trials, clinical practice improvement strategies, and healthcare services research and evaluation. While pediatric patient self-report should be considered the standard for measuring perceived HRQOL, there are circumstances when children are too young, too cognitively impaired, too ill or fatigued to complete a HRQOL instrument, and reliable and valid parent proxy-report instruments are needed in such cases. Further, it is typically parents' perceptions of their children's HRQOL that influences healthcare utilization. Data from the PedsQL DatabaseSM were utilized to test the reliability and validity of parent proxy-report at the individual age subgroup level for ages 2-16 years as recommended by recent FDA guidelines.

Methods

The sample analyzed represents parent proxy-report age data on 13,878 children ages 2 to 16 years from the PedsQL 4.0 Generic Core Scales DatabaseSM. Parents were recruited from general pediatric clinics, subspecialty clinics, and hospitals in which their children were being seen for well-child checks, mild acute illness, or chronic illness care (n = 3,718, 26.8%), and from a State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) in California (n = 10,160, 73.2%).

Citation impact

713
total citations
FWCI
47.92
Percentile
100%
References
51
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Proxy (statistics)
  • Medicine
  • Quality of life (healthcare)
  • Subspecialty
  • Health care
  • Gerontology
  • Clinical psychology
  • Family medicine
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