Publication: Health-Related Quality of Life in Craniofacial Conditions Concordance Between Child and Parent Reports
Program
Authors
Morgan, Austin
Din, Hena
Blum, Jessica
Paap, Michael
Meier, Annie
Carrizosa, Claudia
Malcarne, Vanessa
Gosman, Amanda
Advisor
Date
Language
Type
Publisher:
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Abstract
Introduction: Craniofacial conditions (CFCs) profoundly influence healthrelated
quality of life (HRQoL). In children with CFCs, patient-reported outcome
measures have become an integral adjunct to more objective surgical outcome
measures. Patient-reported outcome measures are designed to assess HRQoL domains.
Few studies have evaluated parent and child agreement about HRQoL in
the context of CFCs. The aims of this study were to explore the impact of CFCs
on HRQoL domains in children and their parents and to determine whether patient
and parent perspectives converge.
Methods: The Craniofacial Conditions Quality of Life Scale (CFC-QoL) is a
newly developed 5-domain survey available in child self-report and parent report
and in English- and Spanish-language versions. The 5 domains are the following:
social impact, psychological function, physical function, family impact, and appearance
impact. Children with CFCs (ages 7–21 years) and parents of children
with CFCs were recruited via the craniofacial care team clinic at a major metropolitan
children's hospital. All children and parents completed the CFC-QoL
Scale in their preferred language of English or Spanish. Scale internal consistencies
were calculated for child patients and parents, for English and Spanish versions.
Scores on the 5 domains were compared for children and parents across
English versus Spanish versions.
Results: For children with CFCs (N = 75), the sex was distributed almost equally.
Patients were mostly Hispanic (69.3%), and their ages ranged from 7 to 21 years
old (M = 13.2, SD = 3.62). The mean values for patient and parent scores were
low, suggesting good HRQoL across all 5 domains. Pearson correlation coefficientswere
computed to explore the interrelationships between patient and parent
report for each of the 5 CFC-QoL subscales. For the total sample, patient and parent
scores were significantly and moderately positively correlated for all subscales.
When analyzed separately based on sex, ethnicity, and diagnostic group,
the correlation patterns were not identical to those found for the total sample.
When analyzed separately for diagnostic group, therewas less consistency in patterns,
with patient-parent dyads showing different levels of agreement based on
child's diagnostic grouping.
Conclusions: Although there is substantial agreement between parents and
patients when considered on a group level, there is moderate agreement between
patients and parentswhen considered at the dyadic level, underscoring the importance
of measuring and considering both perspectives.