| Literature DB >> 28763047 |
Meaghann S Weaver1, Cheryl Darnall2, Sue Bace3, Catherine Vail4, Andrew MacFadyen5, Christopher Wichman6.
Abstract
Pediatric palliative care studies often rely on proxy-reported instead of direct child-reported quality of life metrics. The purpose of this study was to longitudinally evaluate quality of life for pediatric patients receiving palliative care consultations and to compare patient-reported quality of life with parent perception of the child's quality of life across wellness domains. The 23-item PedsQL™ V4.0 Measurement Model was utilized for ten child and parent dyads at time of initial palliative care consultation, Month 6, and Month 12 to assess for physical, emotional, social, and cognitive dimensions of quality of life as reported independently by the child and by the parent for the child. Findings were analyzed using Bland-Altman plots to compare observed differences to limits of agreement. This study revealed overall consistency between parent- and child-reported quality of life across domains. Physical health was noted to be in closest agreement. At the time of initial palliative care consult, children collectively scored their social quality of life higher than parental perception of the child's social quality of life; whereas, emotional and cognitive quality of life domains were scored lower by children than by the parental report. At the one year survey time point, the physical, emotional, and social domains trended toward more positive patient perception than proxy perception with congruence between quality of life scores for the cognitive domain. Findings reveal the importance of eliciting a child report in addition to a parent report when measuring and longitudinally trending perceptions on quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: patient reported outcomes; pediatric palliative care; quality of life
Year: 2017 PMID: 28763047 PMCID: PMC5575587 DOI: 10.3390/children4080065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Children (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9067
Figure 1Bland–Altman agreement plots for the four domains at baseline. The solid black line represents the mean of the child–parent differences. The two extreme dotted gray lines mark the upper and lower agreement boundaries.