| Literature DB >> 25890377 |
Gareth Furber1, Leonie Segal2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Few cost-utility studies of child and adolescent mental health services (CAMHS) use quality adjusted life years (a combination of utility weights and time in health state) as the outcome to enable comparison across disparate programs and modalities. Part of the solution to this problem involves embedding preference-based health-related quality of life (PBHRQOL) utility instruments, which generate utility weights, in clinical practice and research. The Child Health Utility (CHU9D) is a generic PBHRQOL instrument developed specifically for use in young people. The purpose of this study was to assess the suitability of the CHU9D as a routine outcome measure in CAMHS clinical practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25890377 PMCID: PMC4340862 DOI: 10.1186/s12955-015-0218-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Qual Life Outcomes ISSN: 1477-7525 Impact factor: 3.186
Study research questions
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| Face validity and practicality | 1. Is the CHU9D simple to understand and complete? | CHU9D should be well understood and easily completed by participants. |
| Reliability | 2. What is the internal consistency of the CHU9D? | Instrument should have acceptable to excellent internal consistency indicating the items are tapping into the same general construct (health-related quality of life). |
| Convergent validity | 3. How do items and scores on the CHU9D correlate with items and scores from the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ), a well-established and widely used routine outcome measure in child and adolescent mental health? | Items and scores on the CHU9D should demonstrate predictable and moderate to high correlations with items and scores on the SDQ, indicating they are tapping into the same broad construct (psychosocial functioning). |
| 4. Can the CHU9D discriminate between children in the clinical and non-clinical range on the SDQ? | Scores on the CHU9D should be able to discriminate between children at different mental health symptom severity levels. | |
| Validity of utility weights | 5. How do the utility weights from this child and adolescent mental health sample compare against utility weights obtained from other child and adolescent mental health samples? | The utility weights that the CHU9D generates for this mental health population should reflect utility weights obtained in other similar mental health populations. |
Mapping of CHU9D items to SDQ items
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| How worried is your child today? | Many worries or often seems worried |
| Nervous or clingy in new situations, easily loses confidence | |
| Many fears, easily scared | |
| How sad is your child today? | Often unhappy, depressed or tearful |
| How much pain does your child have today? | NA |
| How tired is your child today? | NA |
| How annoyed is your child today? | Often loses temper |
| How is your child doing with their schoolwork/homework today? | NA |
| How did your child sleep last night? | NA |
| How is your child doing with their daily routine today? | NA |
| To what extent can your child join in with activities today? | NA |
Descriptive characteristics of participating caregivers and their children
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| Age of child – Mean (SD) | 11.71 (5.75) |
| Age band, % | |
| 5-7 | 10.5 |
| 8-10 | 25 |
| 11-13 | 31 |
| 14-17 | 33.5 |
| Gender of Child, % | |
| Male | 52.5 |
| Female | 47.5 |
| Caregiver, % | |
| Mother | 87 |
| Father | 8.5 |
| Other | 4.5 |
| First time with CAMHS, % | |
| Yes | 74.5 |
| No | 25.5 |
| Length of time with CAMHS for current Episode (months), mean (SD) | 11.95 (16.6) |
| Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) | |
| Total score, mean (SD) | 19.52 (7.87) |
| Emotion Subscale, mean (SD) | 5.40 (2.55) |
| Conduct Subscale, mean (SD) | 4.01 (2.86) |
| Hyperactivity Subscale, mean (SD) | 6.41 (2.81) |
| Peer Subscale, mean (SD) | 3.71 (2.43) |
| Prosocial Subscale, mean (SD) | 6.92 (2.23) |
| SDQ Clinical Band, band (%) | |
| Normal | 22 |
| Borderline | 12 |
| Abnormal | 66 |
| CHU9D Raw score, mean (SD) | 18.51 (6.64) |
| CHU9D Raw score, median (IQR) | 17.00 (13–23) |
| CHU-9D Utility score | |
| UK Adult Tariff, mean (SD) | 0.803 (.117) |
| Australian Adolescent Tariff, mean (SD) | 0.739 (.145) |
Figure 1Distribution of CHU9D utility weights for UK and Adolescent Tariffs.
Figure 2Scatterplot of CHU9D utility weights and SDQ scores by Tariff.
Correlation matrix of CHU9D and SDQ items
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| .043 | .007 | .054 | -.059 | -.170* | -.233** | -.031 | -.190** | -.169* | .151* | .119 |
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| .089 | .148* | .040 | .113 | .267** | .140* | .144* | .181* | .096 | -.242** | -.242** |
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| .191** | .182** | .196** | .260** | .169* | .108 | .275** | .214** | .178* | -.314** | -.315** |
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| -.066 | -.055 | -.066 | -.043 | -.081 | -.144* | -.155* | -.037 | -.161* | .136 | .121 |
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| .204** | .180* | -.064 | .180* |
| .290** | .188** | .248** | .178* | -.327** | -.342** |
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| .018 | .183** | .063 | .084 | .125 | .217** | .209** | .201** | .168* | -.233** | -.207** |
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| -.041 | -.146* | .148* | -.138 | -.261** | -.294** | -.263** | -.338** | -.292** | .332** | .317** |
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| .292** | .260** | .209** | .309** | .033 | .269** | .012 | .076 | -.321** | -.364** |
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| -.014 | -.026 | .052 | -.007 | -.111 | -.120 | -.022 | -.186** | -.279** | .173* | .116 |
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| .064 | .173* | .019 | .065 | .226** | .159* | .169* | .218** | .174* | -.255** | -.242** |
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| -.112 | -.121 | .008 | -.087 | -.232** | -.060 | -.216** | -.221** | -.216** | .254** | .261** |
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| .076 | .051 | .007 | .117 | .298** | .219** | .095 | .151* | .099 | -.227** | -.218** |
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| .076 | .107 | .305** | .079 | .293** | .061 | .184** | -.296** | -.318** |
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| -.077 | -.070 | .087 | -.100 | -.153* | -.176* | -.071 | -.239** | -.197** | .187** | .167* |
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| .134 | .148* | -.074 | .130 | .235** | .322** | .135 | .220** | .247** | -.290** | -.264** |
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| .156* | .104 | -.010 | .143* | .054 | .054 | .020 | .096 | -.129 | -.125 |
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| .000 | -.047 | -.003 | -.075 | -.188** | -.148* | -.104 | -.138 | -.144* | .191** | .162* |
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| .076 | .151* | -.031 | .123 | .282** | .272** | .193** | .188** | .230** | -.286** | -.272** |
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| .170* | .198** | .085 | .127 | .231** | .005 | .167* | .099 | .165* | -.252** | -.257** |
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| .000 | -.053 | -.069 | -.035 | -.062 | -.233** | -.009 | -.127 | -.219** | .163* | .124 |
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| -.045 | -.067 | .126 | -.106 | -.193** | -.291** | -.155* | -.217** | -.252** | .228** | .196** |
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| .016 | .108 | -.034 | .113 | .144* | .234** | .152* | .341** | .171* | -.247** | -.223** |
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| .217** | .105 | .091 | .114 | .118 | .128 | .198** | .028 | .216** | -.211** | -.215** |
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| .162* | .105 | .143* | .221** | .120 | .278** | .083 | .113 | -.224** | -.259** |
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| .014 | -.041 | .083 | -.077 | -.109 | -.436** | -.084 | -.243** | -.126 | .230** | .171* |
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| .250** | .305** | .049 | .235** | .424** | .368** | .351** | .350** | .352** | -.506** | -.497** |
**correlation is significant at the .01 level (two-tailed).
*correlation is significant at the .05 level (two-tailed).
Bolded figures are those where CHU9D and SDQ items have clear conceptual overlap.
Linear regression predicting SDQ total score from CHU9D items
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| Constant | 8.22 (5.35, 11.094) | 1.46 | .000 | |
| CHU9D worried | .668 (−.213, 1.548) | .446 | .109 | .136 |
| CHU9D sad | -.103 (−1.18, .973) | .545 | -.015 | .851 |
| CHU9D pain | -.385 (−1.44, .673) | .537 | -.047 | .474 |
| CHU9D tired | -.476 (−1.27, .313) | .400 | -.083 | .236 |
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| CHU9D activities | .766 (−.218, 1.75) | .499 | .107 | .126 |
Note: R2 = .346, Adjusted R2 = .315.
CHU9D weights by respondent characteristics
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| 200 (100) | .803 (.117) | .739 (.145) | .819 (.731-.886) | .746 (.631-.860) | ||
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| 118 (59) | .813 (.108) | .744 (.143) | .828 (.743-.894) | U = −1.021, P = .307 | .740 (.646-.862) | U = −.596, P = .307 |
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| 82 (41) | .790 (.127) | .731 (.148) | .812 (.716-.875) | .752 (.604-.856) | ||
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| 105 (52.5) | .805 (.113) | .746 (.137) | .825 (.748-.878) | U = −.352, P = .725 | .762 (.645-.855) | U = −.669, P = .503 |
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| 95 (47.5) | .801 (.121) | .731 (.153) | .801 (.716-.898) | .740 (.592-.862) | ||
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| 44 (22%) | .877 (.072) | .839 (.106) | .878 (.821-.939) | H(2) = 35.50, P = .000 | .872 (.760-.925) | H(2) = 35.84, P = .000 |
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| 24 (12%) | .852 (.102) | .793 (.139) | .869 (.770-.943) | .830 (.661-.918) | ||
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| 132 (66%) | .770 (.117) | .696 (.138) | .787 (.698-.859) | .702 (.584-.810) | ||
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| 149 (74.5) | .807 (.120) | .743 (.149) | .822 (.729-.901) | U = −1.01, P = .311 | .760 (.624-.872) | U = −.817, P = .414 |
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| 51 (25.5) | .793 (.107) | .727 (.134) | .813 (.733-.861) | .715 (.644-.822) |
Comparison of utility weights from the current study with other mental health populations
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| Current study | 200 5–17 year olds with varied mental health presentations | CHU9D parent completed – UK adult tariff | .803 (.117) |
| 200 5–17 year olds with varied mental health presentations | CHU9D parent completed – Australian adolescent tariff | .739 (.145) | |
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| Stevens and Ratcliffe 2012 [ | Community sample of 961 11 to 17 year olds | CHU9D self-report, web survey – UK tariff | .85 |
| Sub-sample of 67 with long-standing disability, illness or medical condition | CHU9D self-report, web survey – UK tariff | .80 | |
| Sub-sample of 281 with score on KIDSCREEN below the median | CHU9D self-report, web survey – UK tariff | .789 | |
| Ratcliffe et al. 2012 [ | Community sample of 710 11 to 17 year olds | CHU9D self-report, web survey –UK tariff | .931 |
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| Petrou & Kupek 2009 [ | 46 children (mean age 10.9) on a disability registry with behaviour disorders | HUI3 – caregiver completed | .468 |
| 105 children (mean age 11) on a disability registry with autism spectrum disorder | HUI3 – caregiver completed | .433 | |
| 50 children (mean age 10.9) on a disability registry with hyperactivity disorders | HUI3 – caregiver completed | .432 | |
| Petrou et al. 2010 [ | 39 children (aged 11) from a longitudinal study of pre-term infants | HUI3 – caregiver completed | .656 |
| Goodyer et al. 2008 [ | 200 11–17 year olds with depression prior to SSRI therapy | EQ-5D | .49 |
| Bodden et al. 2008 [ | 59 children with anxiety disorders prior to receiving individual CBT | EQ-5D | .87 |
| 57 children with anxiety disorders prior to receiving family CBT | EQ-5D | .83 |