| Literature DB >> 30841595 |
Beth Sprunt1, Barbara McPake2, Manjula Marella3.
Abstract
This paper explores the validity (sensitivity and specificity) of different cut-off levels of the UNICEF/Washington Group Child Functioning Module (CFM) and the inter-rater reliability between teachers and parents as proxy respondents, for disaggregating Fiji's education management information system (EMIS) by disability. The method used was a cross-sectional diagnostic accuracy study comparing CFM items to standard clinical assessments for 472 primary school aged students in Fiji. Whilst previous domain-specific results showed "good" to "excellent" accuracy of the CFM domains seeing, hearing, walking and speaking, newer analysis shows only "fair" to "poor" accuracy of the cognitive domains (learning, remembering and focusing attention) and "fair" of the overall CFM (area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic curve: 0.763 parent responses, 0.786 teacher responses). Severe impairments are reported relatively evenly across CFM response categories "some difficulty", "a lot of difficulty" and "cannot do at all". Most moderate impairments are reported as "some difficulty". The CFM provides a core component of data required for disaggregating Fiji's EMIS by disability. However, choice of cut-off level and mixture of impairment severity reported across response categories are challenges. The CFM alone is not accurate enough to determine funding eligibility. For identifying children with disabilities, the CFM should be part of a broader data collection including learning and support needs data and undertaking eligibility verification visits.Entities:
Keywords: Fiji; UNICEF/Washington Group Child Functioning Module; disability disaggregation; education management information system; validation
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30841595 PMCID: PMC6427525 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16050806
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Demographic characteristics of the study sample.
| Cases ( | Controls ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % | ||
| Gender | Male | 145 | 62.8 | 118 | 49.0 |
| Female | 86 | 37.2 | 123 | 51.0 | |
| Age (years) | 5–7 | 43 | 18.6 | 52 | 21.6 |
| 8–9 | 52 | 22.5 | 53 | 22.0 | |
| 10–11 | 42 | 18.2 | 59 | 24.5 | |
| 12–13 | 51 | 22.1 | 57 | 23.7 | |
| 14–15 | 43 | 18.6 | 20 | 8.3 | |
| Ethnicity | i-Taukei (Fijian) | 141 | 61.0 | 159 | 66.0 |
| Indo-Fijian | 75 | 32.5 | 78 | 32.4 | |
| Other | 15 | 6.5 | 4 | 1.7 | |
| Type of school | Special | 176 | 76.2 | 56 | 23.2 |
| Mainstream primary | 55 | 23.8 | 185 | 76.8 | |
| Parent/guardian respondent | Mother | 130 | 56.3 | 144 | 59.8 |
| Father | 44 | 19.0 | 61 | 25.3 | |
| Other * | 57 | 24.7 | 36 | 14.9 | |
| Highest level of education of parent | Primary | 57 | 25.4 | 52 | 22.3 |
| Secondary | 125 | 55.8 | 146 | 62.7 | |
| Higher education | 42 | 18.8 | 35 | 15.0 | |
| Area of Residence | Urban | 63 | 27.3 | 44 | 18.3 |
| Peri-urban | 112 | 48.5 | 68 | 28.2 | |
| Rural | 45 | 19.5 | 79 | 32.8 | |
| Remote | 11 | 4.8 | 50 | 20.7 | |
* Other: grandparent, aunty, uncle, guardian.
CFM domains, question wording and response categories; coded to indicate which group of domains was used in the various analyses in this paper.
| Code Used in This Paper | Domain | CFM Question | Response Categories | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CFM-13 | CFM-7 | Seeing | ** Does ( |
No difficulty Some difficulty A lot of difficulty Cannot do at all |
| Hearing | ** Does ( | |||
| Walking | ** Does ( | |||
| Speaking | When (child’s name) speaks does he/she have any difficulty being understood by: People inside this household People outside this household | |||
| Learning | Compared with children of the same age, does ( | |||
| Remembering | Compared with children of the same age, does ( | |||
| Focusing attention | Does ( | |||
| Self-care | Does ( | |||
| Accepting changes to routine | Does ( | |||
| Making friends | Does ( | |||
| Anxiety/ worry | How often does ( |
Daily Weekly Monthly A few times a year Never | ||
| Depression/sadness | How often does ( | |||
| Controlling behaviour | Compared with children of the same age, how much difficulty does ( |
No difficulty The same or less More A lot more | ||
** The CFM includes questions to establish whether the child wears glasses, uses a hearing aid, or uses any equipment or receives assistance for walking. If the child does use the assistive device, the question for seeing is “When wearing his/her glasses, does (name) have difficulty seeing?” Similar questions are asked for hearing and walking. The CFM has separate questions for difficulty walking with and without equipment for children who need equipment. Analysis for this paper includes: difficulty walking for children who do not need equipment, plus those who require equipment but have difficulty walking without their equipment (this allows comparison with the Rapid Assessment of Musculoskeletal Impairment which tests function without equipment).
Diagnostic accuracy of the Child Functioning Module (CFM-7); parent versus teacher responses, comparing two cut-off levels: “some difficulty” to “a lot of difficulty”.
| Domain | AUC | Youden Index | Youden Index | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |
| Overall CFM-7 | 0.763 | 0.786 | 0.31 | 0.38 | 0.36 | 0.39 |
| Seeing | 0.848 | 0.823 | 0.69 | 0.61 | 0.13 | 0.35 |
| Hearing | 0.847 | 0.846 | 0.66 | 0.67 | 0.38 | 0.49 |
| Walking | 0.889 | 0.869 | 0.73 | 0.69 | 0.57 | 0.47 |
| Speaking | 0.975 | 0.909 | 0.88 | 0.70 | 0.75 | 0.60 |
| Learning | 0.774 | 0.822 | 0.51 | 0.60 | 0.21 | 0.27 |
| Remembering | 0.663 | 0.781 | 0.29 | 0.54 | 0.14 | 0.17 |
| Focusing attention | 0.623 | 0.686 | 0.24 | 0.37 | 0.05 | 0.10 |
Cross-tabulation: Child Functioning Module results (CFM-7) by level of impairment.
| CFM | Total | Impairment Level Based on Reference (Clinical) Assessments *, | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Difficulty in any CFM-7 Domain * | Parent, | Teacher, | None | Mild | Moderate | Severe | ||||
| Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |||
|
| 84 (17.8) | 85 (21.7) | 78 | 74 | 2 | 2 | 3 | 6 | 1 | 3 |
|
| 212 (44.9) | 154 (39.3) | 109 | 66 | 8 | 10 | 33 | 26 | 62 | 52 |
|
| 122 (25.8) | 104 (26.5) | 41 | 27 | 9 | 5 | 25 | 19 | 47 | 53 |
|
| 54 (11.4) | 49 (12.5) | 2 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 4 | 50 | 43 |
* Child is recorded in the highest level of difficulty from any of the CFM-7 questions on seeing, hearing, walking, being understood when speaking, learning, remembering and focusing attention, and in the highest level of severity from any of the five reference standard assessments for vision, hearing, musculoskeletal, speech and cognitive impairment.
Proportion endorsing each domain at the cut-off level “some difficulty” compared to “a lot of difficulty”, and inter-rater reliability between parents versus teachers.
| Cut-Off Level | ≥ Some Difficulty/Weekly * | ≥ Lot of Difficulty/Daily * | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respondent | Parent | Teacher | ICC | 95% CI | Sig. | Parent | Teacher | ICC | 95% CI | Sig. |
| Self-care | 95 (20.1) | 84 (21.6) | 0.72 | 0.66–0.77 | 0.000 | 11 (2.3) | 24 (6.2) | 0.42 | 0.30–0.53 | 0.000 |
| Feeling anxious * | 117 (24.8) | 103 (26.9) | 0.26 | 0.10–0.40 | 0.002 | 42 (8.9) | 51 (13.3) | 0.09 | −0.02–0.25 | 0.186 |
| Feeling sad * | 121 (25.7) | 89 (23.4) | 0.19 | 0.01–0.34 | 0.021 | 36 (7.6) | 35 (9.2) | 0.08 | −0.03–0.25 | 0.211 |
| Controlling behaviour Ω | NA | NA | - | - | - | 67 (14.2) | 72 (18.8) | 0.20 | 0.02–0.34 | 0.015 |
| Accepting changes | 232 (49.4) | 153 (39.2) | 0.14 | −0.05–0.29 | 0.075 | 39 (8.3) | 27 (6.9) | 0.09 | −0.12–0.25 | 0.190 |
| Making friends | 79 (16.8) | 85 (21.9) | 0.34 | 0.19–0.46 | 0.000 | 14 (3.0) | 21 (5.4) | 0.25 | 0.82–0.38 | 0.003 |
ICC = Intraclass correlation; Ω = more difficulty and a lot more difficulty.
Frequencies of any impairment occurring amongst children reported as having a highest level of difficulty of at least “some difficulty” compared to at least “a lot of difficulty” on any question on the CFM (CFM-13), comparing parent and teacher responses.
| CFM-13 (Highest Level of Difficulty on Any Question) | Impairment Level Based on Reference Standard (Clinical) Assessments, | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Controls | Cases | |||||||||
|
| No Impairment | Mild Impairment | Moderate Impairment | Severe Impairment | ||||||
| P | T | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |
| Some difficulty | 189 | 117 | 113 (59.8) | 62 (53.0) | 7 (3.7) | 6 (5.1) | 25 (13.2) | 18 (15.4) | 44 (23.3) | 31 (26.5) |
| ≥ Lot of difficulty | 231 | 198 | 70 (30.3) | 40 (20.2) | 11 (4.8) | 9 (4.5) | 35 (15.2) | 32 (16.2) | 115 (49.8) | 117 (59.1) |
| Intraclass correlation, 95% confidence intervals, significance | ICC = 0.61 | ICC = 0.85 | ICC = 0.06 | ICC = 0.55 | ||||||
Frequencies of five types of impairment occurring amongst children reported as having a highest level of difficulty of at least “some difficulty” compared to at least “a lot of difficulty” on any question on the CFM (CFM-13), comparing parent and teacher responses.
| CFM-13 (Highest Level of Difficulty on Any Question) | Impairment Level Based on Reference Standard (Clinical) Assessments, | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Controls | Cases | |||||||||
|
| No Vision Impairment (≥6/9 ¥) | Mild VI (<6/9 ≥6/18 ¥) | Moderate VI (<6/18 ≥6/60 ¥) | Severe-Blind (<6/60 ¥) | ||||||
| P | T | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |
| Some difficulty | 169 | 109 | 149 (88.2) | 101 (92.7) | 2 (1.2) | 2 (1.8) | 4 (2.4) | 1 (0.9) | 14 (8.3) | 5 (4.6) |
| ≥ Lot of difficulty | 196 | 157 | 176 (89.8) | 134 (85.4) | 3 (1.5) | 2 (1.3) | 7 (3.6) | 7 (4.5) | 10 (5.1) | 14 (8.9) |
|
| No Hearing Impairment(<26 dBA) | Mild HI | Moderate HI | Severe-Profound HI | ||||||
| P | T | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |
| Some difficulty | 164 | 103 | 138 (84.1) | 85 (82.5) | 15 (9.1) | 11 (10.7) | 8 (4.9) | 4 (3.9) | 3 (1.8) | 3 (2.9) |
| ≥ Lot of difficulty | 145 | 132 | 110 (66.3) | 78 (59.1) | 15 (9.0) | 16 (12.1) | 12 (7.2) | 11 (8.3) | 29 (17.5) | 27 (20.5) |
|
| No musculoskeletal impairment (MSI) ^ | Mild MSI | Moderate MSI | Severe MSI | ||||||
| P | T | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |
| Some difficulty | 175 | 111 | 169 (96.6) | 105 (94.6) | 3 (1.7) | 2 (1.8) | 3 (1.7) | 3 (2.7) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (0.9) |
| ≥ Lot of difficulty | 208 | 185 | 172 (82.7) | 152 (82.2) | 6 (2.9) | 6 (3.2) | 11 (5.3) | 11 (5.9) | 19 (9.1) | 16 (8.6) |
|
| No speech impairment (4.0–5.0 ICS) ₱ | Inconclusive speech function (2.5 < 4.0 ICS) ₱ | Moderate speech impairment (1.8 < 2.5 ICS) ₱ | Severe speech impairment (1.0 < 1.8 ICS) ₱ | ||||||
| P | T | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |
| Some difficulty | 185 | 114 | 141 (76.2) | 72 (63.2) | 38 (20.5) | 31 (27.2) | 4 (2.2) | 3 (2.6) | 2 (1.1) | 8 (7.0) |
| ≥ Lot of difficulty | 226 | 194 | 71 (31.4) | 71 (36.6) | 90 (39.8) | 68 (35.1) | 17 (7.5) | 16 (8.2) | 48 (21.2) | 39 (20.1) |
|
| Average/better cognitive function | Low average cognitive function | Moderate cognitive Impairment | Severe cognitive impairment | ||||||
| P | T | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | Parent | Teacher | |
| Some difficulty | 91 | 67 | 14 (15.4) | 6 (9.0) | 35 (38.5) | 27 (40.3) | 14 (15.4) | 16 (23.9) | 28 (30.8) | 18 (26.9) |
| ≥ Lot of difficulty | 108 | 102 | 5 (4.6) | 3 (2.9) | 24 (22.2) | 16 (15.7) | 30 (27.8) | 25 (24.5) | 49 (45.4) | 58 (56.9) |
VI = Vision impairment; HI=Hearing impairment; MSI = Musculoskeletal impairment (mobility only); ¥ Visual Acuity of better eye; NPL—no perception of light; CF2m—counting fingers at 2metres. ^ Severity for the Rapid Assessment of Musculoskeletal Impairment was determined using the parameters for the percentage of function outlined in the International Classification of Functioning (ICF) [42]. Percentage loss of the musculoskeletal systems ability to function as a whole. ₱ Intelligibility in Context Scale—scores between 1.0–2.43 (detailed in [23]. For this paper, severe vision impairment and blindness are combined in one category and severe and profound hearing impairment are combined in one category. Results with these severities separately reported is available in [21].
Figure 1Inter-rater reliability between parents and teachers of the overall CFM (CFM-13) and of individual domains.