14 results on '"Sato, Iori"'
Search Results
2. Factors influencing self- and parent-reporting health-related quality of life in children with brain tumors
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Sato, Iori, Higuchi, Akiko, Yanagisawa, Takaaki, Mukasa, Akitake, Ida, Kohmei, Sawamura, Yutaka, Sugiyama, Kazuhiko, Saito, Nobuhito, Kumabe, Toshihiro, Terasaki, Mizuhiko, Nishikawa, Ryo, Ishida, Yasushi, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
- Published
- 2013
3. Cancer-specific health-related quality of life in children with brain tumors
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Sato, Iori, Higuchi, Akiko, Yanagisawa, Takaaki, Mukasa, Akitake, Ida, Kohmei, Sawamura, Yutaka, Sugiyama, Kazuhiko, Saito, Nobuhito, Kumabe, Toshihiro, Terasaki, Mizuhiko, Nishikawa, Ryo, Ishida, Yasushi, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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- 2014
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4. Reliability and validity of the Japanese version of the Caregiving Interface Work Scale in employed Japanese family caregivers.
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Sakka, Mariko, Kita, Sachiko, Sato, Iori, Soejima, Takafumi, Eguchi, Hisashi, Tokita, Masahito, Yamamoto‐Mitani, Noriko, Shimazu, Akihito, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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PSYCHOLOGY of caregivers ,COGNITION ,STATISTICAL correlation ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,FACTOR analysis ,FAMILIES ,INTERNET ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,ROLE conflict ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,WORK ,STATISTICAL reliability ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Aim: This study aimed to develop a Japanese version of the Caregiving Interface Work Scale (J‐CIWS) for use with employed Japanese family caregivers. Methods: Permission was obtained from the developer of the original CIWS. The CIWS contains 20 items: 10 measuring care interface work (CIW) and 10 measuring work interface care (WIC). Responses are measured on a five‐point Likert scale. The J‐CIWS was developed through forward‐ and back‐translation and cognitive interviews of employed family caregivers. An internet survey was conducted with 116 employed family caregivers, and 78 participants answered a retest. Questionnaire items included the J‐CIWS and demographic factors. Factor analysis was conducted to determine the J‐CIWS factor structure. Validity was assessed based on known‐groups, convergent and discriminant validity. Internal consistency was examined by calculating Cronbach's α. Test–retest reliability was examined by calculating the Pearson's correlation coefficient. Results: The mean participant age was 50.3 years; 74 (63.8%) were male. The average weekly working and caregiving hours were 41.6 and 12.1 h, respectively. Confirmatory factor analysis supported the original two‐factor model. High internal consistency (Cronbach's alpha >0.90) and sufficient test–retest reliability (weighted κ score >0.45) were demonstrated for both subscales. Convergent and discriminant validity were acceptable for the two subscales (CIW and WIC). Conclusions: This study confirmed the usefulness of the CIWS within a Japanese context. The J‐CIWS may be useful for evaluating the extent of the conflict between work and care among employed family caregivers. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2021; 21: 254–261. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2021
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5. Impacts of physical late effects on presenteeism in childhood cancer survivors.
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Soejima, Takafumi, Sato, Iori, Takita, Junko, Koh, Katsuyoshi, Kaneko, Takashi, Inada, Hiroko, Ozono, Shuichi, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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CANCER patients , *EMPLOYEE attitudes , *LABOR productivity , *LIFE skills , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *TUMORS in children , *WORK , *WORK capacity evaluation , *JOB performance , *PHYSICIANS' attitudes , *JOB involvement , *PRESENTEEISM (Labor) , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *DISEASE complications , *ADULTS - Abstract
Background: Many childhood cancer survivors (CCSs) experience physical late effects related to their cancer types and treatment modalities. Physical late effects are an important factor in various occupational outcomes among CCSs. However, the relationship between physical late effects and presenteeism has remained unclear. This study aimed to estimate the impacts of physical late effects on presenteeism among employed CCSs. Methods: Childhood cancer survivors replied to a questionnaire regarding presenteeism, and their attending physicians assessed their physical late effects between September 2014 and December 2015. The Work Limitations Questionnaire was used to measure presenteeism. Propensity score analysis and a generalized linear model were used to adjust covariates related to physical late effects and / or presenteeism. Results: Of the 125 questionnaires distributed, 114 were returned. The data from 61 employed CCSs were analyzed. After controlling for covariates by propensity score analysis and generalized linear model, there were no significant differences in presenteeism between employed CCSs with either no or single physical late effects. However, employed CCSs with multiple physical late effects reported higher scores in Output (Estimate = 9.3, P = 0.041), Physical Demands (Estimate = 12.2, P = 0.020), and Productivity Loss scores (Estimate = 2.4, P = 0.045) on the Work Limitations Questionnaire than employed CCSs with no physical late effects. Conclusions: Employed CCSs with multiple physical late effects were at an increased risk for presenteeism. Healthcare and social welfare systems should be established to provide vocational assistance for CCSs after being employed to alleviate presenteeism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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6. Nurses' perceptions regarding transitional care for adolescents and young adults with childhood‐onset chronic diseases.
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Suzuki, Seigo, Kita, Sachiko, Morisaki, Mayumi, Kikuchi, Ryota, Sato, Iori, Iwasaki, Miwa, Otomo, Eiko, Sekiguchi, Hiromi, Hirata, Yoichiro, Sato, Atsushi, Sugiyama, Masahiko, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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CHRONIC diseases ,FISHER exact test ,MEDICAL care ,NURSES' attitudes ,NURSING ,PEDIATRIC nursing ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,SELF-evaluation ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software ,WORK experience (Employment) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,HOSPITAL nursing staff ,TERTIARY care ,MANN Whitney U Test ,ADOLESCENCE ,ADULTS - Abstract
Aim: Nurses are expected to have a role in the transition of care from pediatric to adult medical practices for adolescents and young adults with childhood‐onset chronic diseases. This study compares the experience, knowledge, and perceptions regarding the ideal care among adult unit and pediatric nurses regarding the transition to adult care for those with childhood‐onset chronic diseases. Methods: A cross‐sectional study using self‐report questionnaires was conducted with nurses in a tertiary hospital in Tokyo. Questions were generated based on a literature review and expert discussion. Data from 1,064 participants were analyzed (adult unit nurses: n = 959, 90.1%; pediatric nurses: n = 105, 9.9%). Results: Among 623 adult unit nurses who had care experience for adult patients with a childhood‐onset chronic disease, 458 nurses (73.6%) were unaware of the concept of transitional care. As the obstructive factors for transition, pediatric nurses recognized problems in healthcare providers' attitudes and lack of transitional care coordinators, while the adult unit nurses emphasized the patients' wishes to continue to receive pediatric healthcare. Most adult unit nurses expected pediatric nurses to function as transitional care coordinators. Conclusion: Adult unit and pediatric nurses had different perceptions of the barriers in transitioning children with chronic diseases to adult care. It is important to have educational programs focusing on transitional care for all nurses, both to enable pediatric nurses to improve transition readiness of children with chronic diseases and to offer adult patients with a childhood‐onset chronic disease continuing support through adult unit nurses. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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7. Randomized comparative study of child and caregiver responses to three software functions added to the Japanese version of the electronic Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (ePedsQL) questionnaire.
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Sato, Iori, Sakka, Mariko, Soejima, Takafumi, Kita, Sachiko, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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QUALITY of life ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,HEALTH behavior ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,MEDICAL care ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,CAREGIVERS ,RESEARCH methodology ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,MANN Whitney U Test ,PEDIATRICS ,COMPARATIVE studies ,SURVEYS ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling - Abstract
Background: Patient-reported outcomes (PROs) refer to any report of the status of a patient's health condition, health behavior, or experience with healthcare directly from the patient, without interpretation of the patient's response by a clinician or any other external party. While many PROs, such as the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL), were originally administered in paper-and-pencil format, these are now available as electronic versions (ePROs). Although ePROs might well have used the same structure as their paper versions, we developed an alternate ePedsQL incorporating three software functions: 1) a non-forcing non-response alert, 2) a conditional question branch of the School Functioning Scale that only displays for (pre) school children, and 3) a vertical item-by-item display for small-screen devices. This report evaluated the effect of these functions on item non-response rate, survey completion time, and user experience. Methods: All surveys were conducted via the online/computer mode. We compared the dynamic format containing the three functions with the basic format in a randomized comparative study in 2803 children and 6289 caregivers in Japan. Results: We found that the non-response alert lowered the item non-response rate (0.338% to 0.046%, t = − 4.411, p < 0.001 by generalized linear mixed model analysis). The conditional question branch had mixed effects on survey completion time depending on the respondents' age. Surprisingly, respondents rated the vertical question display for handheld devices less legible than the matrix format. Further, multigroup structural equation modelling revealed that the same configuration for both formats showed an acceptable fit (CFI 0.933, RMSEA 0.060, SRMR 0.038) but the errors of observed variables were larger for the dynamic format than the basic format. Conclusions: We confirmed the robustness of the ePedsQL in different formats. The non-response rate of ePedsQL was very low even in the absence of an alert. The branch and item-by-item display were effective but unnecessary for all populations. Our findings further understanding of how humans respond to special software functions and different digital survey formats and provide new insight on how the three tested functions might be most successfully implemented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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8. Simple change in logistic procedure improves response rate to QOL assessment: a report from the Japan Children's Cancer Group.
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Sato, Iori, Soejima, Takafumi, Ishida, Yasushi, Maeda, Miho, Koh, Katsuyoshi, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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CANCER ,QUALITY of life ,CLINICAL trials ,MEDICAL care ,CANCER patients ,STATISTICS ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,HEALTH outcome assessment ,REGRESSION analysis ,TUMORS in children ,PRE-tests & post-tests ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH funding ,DATA analysis ,ODDS ratio ,SECONDARY analysis ,EVALUATION - Abstract
Background: Reducing non-completion of quality-of-life assessment in clinical trials is an important challenge in obtaining accurate data and unbiased interpretation of patients' quality-of-life for each regimen. We evaluated the effect of changing our questionnaire distribution procedure in a multicenter phase II/III trial on the response rate to a quality-of-life questionnaire. Methods: In the trial, we distributed 1767 questionnaires and 1045 were returned. We adopted a regression discontinuing design and estimated the change in response rate between pre-intervention (quality-of-life questionnaires were sent to each center soon after patient registration) and post-intervention (a set of tailored questionnaires was sent just before the first quality-of-life assessment). Results: The post-intervention response rate was higher (odds ratio = 1.62) than the pre-intervention response rate. Conclusions: A simple logistic intervention reduced the non-completion of QOL assessment in this case, suggesting that a simple change can contribute to improving clinical trial accomplishment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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9. Associations among behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia, care burden, and family‐to‐work conflict of employed family caregivers.
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Sakka, Mariko, Goto, Jun, Kita, Sachiko, Sato, Iori, Soejima, Takafumi, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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DIAGNOSIS of dementia ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RURAL conditions ,SURVEYS ,FAMILY conflict ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,BURDEN of care ,CAREGIVER attitudes ,WORK-life balance ,CROSS-sectional method ,STATISTICAL models - Abstract
Aim: The present study aimed to examine the associations among behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) of persons with dementia (PWD), care burden and family‐to‐work conflict (FWC) of employed family caregivers. Method: A cross‐sectional study was carried out with employed adult daughter or son (or in‐law) caregivers for PWD from two rural cities in Japan. FWC, care burden and the degree of BPSD were evaluated by the Survey Work‐Home Interaction‐NijmeGen, Zarit Burden Scale‐Short Version and Dementia Behavior Disturbance Scale, respectively. Of the 200 questionnaires distributed, 130 were returned. A total of 53 respondents were not employed, and seven questionnaires had missing data for demographic variables, Survey Work‐Home Interaction‐NijmeGen, Zarit Burden Scale‐Short Version or Dementia Behavior Disturbance Scale. Thus, complete data from 70 respondents were analyzed through structural equation modeling. Results: The mean age of employed family caregivers was 56 years, and 34 (48.5%) were men. The mean age of PWD was 84 years, and there were 68 (68.6%) men. The path model with a good fit was shown (root mean square error of approximation 0.136, comparative fit index 0.960 and goodness of fit index 0.965). The path model showed that BPSD affected FWC, and that the association was partially mediated by care burden. Conclusions: The results show that a decrease in not only care burden, but also BPSD, of PWD is important for employed family caregivers to reduce their FWC and maintain their work–life balance. Geriatr Gerontol Int 2019; 19: 51–55. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Quality of life after living donor liver transplant for biliary atresia in Japan.
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Kikuchi, Ryota, Mizuta, Koichi, Urahashi, Taizen, Sanada, Yukihiro, Yamada, Naoya, Onuma, Erika, Sato, Iori, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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BILIARY atresia ,LIVER transplantation ,MEDICAL records ,PEDIATRICS ,POSTOPERATIVE period ,QUALITY of life ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SELF-evaluation ,SURVEYS ,ORGAN donors ,EFFECT sizes (Statistics) ,CROSS-sectional method ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Abstract: Background: Health‐related quality of life (HRQOL) is an important outcome in solid organ transplantation. This study evaluated and explored the factors of generic and transplant‐specific HRQOL in Japanese pediatric and adolescent patients with biliary atresia (BA) after living donor liver transplant (LDLT). Methods: A cross‐sectional survey using anonymous questionnaires was completed between April and July 2015. Patient medical records were accessed. The Japanese version of Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory
TM Generic Core Scales and Transplant Modules (child self‐report and parent proxy‐report) was administered. Results: Participants consisted of 75 patients (mean age at survey, 9.6 years) and 74 parents. Japanese patients reported higher generic and transplant‐specific HRQOL (total score) than that reported by US patients with BA after LT (US I; age at survey, 7.2 years) and by US patients after solid organ transplant (US II; age at survey, 11.3 years; LT, 53.8%; effect size, 0.55–0.96). Japanese parents, however, rated their children's generic HRQOL (total score) similar to that rated by the US I and II parents (0.13 and 0.30, respectively) and reported lower transplant‐specific HRQOL (total score) than that reported by US II (0.26). Although the number of types of prescribed drugs was a common factor in HRQOL, most demographic and medical factors (e.g. child's age at survey and consultation frequency) varied with reporter (i.e. patients and parents). Conclusions: The levels and factors of generic and transplant‐specific HRQOL of Japanese pediatric and adolescent patients with BA after LDLT varied with reporter (i.e. patients or parents). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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11. Factors influencing mother-child communication about fathers with neurobehavioural sequelae after brain injury.
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Takanashi, Shiho, Sakka, Mariko, Sato, Iori, Watanabe, Shu, Tanaka, Shota, Ooshio, Ayumi, Saito, Nobuhito, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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COGNITION disorders diagnosis ,BRAIN injury diagnosis ,STROKE diagnosis ,COMMUNICATION ,EDUCATION ,FAMILIES ,FATHERS ,HOSPITALS ,MOTHER-child relationship ,MOTHERS ,NEUROLOGIC manifestations of general diseases ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,PSYCHOLOGICAL stress ,SOCIAL support ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,CROSS-sectional method ,DATA analysis software - Abstract
Objective: The present study clarified factors related to mother-child communication openness when fathers suffer neurobehavioural sequelae after stroke or traumatic brain injury. Research design: A cross-sectional study using self-report anonymous questionnaires was conducted. Methods and procedures: Forty-one mothers with 6-22-year-old children participated. The questionnaire examined personal factors (mother's psychological distress), social/family factors (family support functioning), illness-related factors (father's time at home and neurobehavioural sequelae severity) and mother's perceived level of open communication. Multiple regression was used to analyse factors related to mother-child communication openness. Results:Mother-child open communication was explained by family support functioning (β = 0.449), father's time at home (β = -0.325) and mother's psychological distress (β = -0.303). Neurobehavioural sequelae severity was not associated with mother-child open communication. Conclusions: Personal, social/family and illness-related factors were related to mother-child communication about paternal illness. Professionals should promote optimal family support functioning, connect families with external resources and assess families' interaction processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2017
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12. Development of the Japanese version of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ Transplant Module.
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Kikuchi, Ryota, Mizuta, Koichi, Urahashi, Taizen, Sanada, Yukihiro, Yamada, Naoya, Onuma, Erika, Ono, Minoru, Endo, Miyoko, Sato, Iori, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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QUALITY of life ,DISCRIMINANT analysis ,EXPERIMENTAL design ,INTERVIEWING ,RESEARCH methodology ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,RESEARCH evaluation ,SELF-evaluation ,TRANSLATIONS ,PILOT projects ,TRANSPLANTATION of organs, tissues, etc. ,FIELD research ,STATISTICAL reliability ,RESEARCH methodology evaluation ,CHILDREN ,PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Background Health-related quality of life ( HRQOL) is an important outcome in pediatric solid organ transplantation. Considering the emerging problems after transplantation, an evaluation of transplant-specific aspects of HRQOL is essential, but no validated HRQOL measure is available in Japan. The aim of this study was therefore to develop the Japanese version of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory
™ (Peds QL) Transplant Module Child Self-Report and to investigate its feasibility, reliability, and validity. Methods Based on the Peds QL linguistic validation process, the Japanese version of the Peds QL Transplant Module was developed through translation and cognitive interviews (patient testing). The scale's reliability and validity were investigated, using statistical analyses of field tests of the target population. Results Eighty-seven pairs of pediatric liver-transplant recipients and their parents participated in the field test. The pediatric patients completed the measure in 3-7 min, and the rate of missing items was low (0.27%). Excellent internal consistency and test-retest reliability were confirmed. Known-groups validity, concurrent validity, and convergent and discriminant validity also were confirmed. Conclusions Excellent feasibility, reliability, and validity of this Japanese self-report version of the Peds QL Transplant Module Child Self-Report were verified. As a measure of transplant-specific aspects of HRQOL in Japanese pediatric patients who have undergone organ transplants, the Japanese version of the Peds QL Transplant Module is appropriate for use in clinical and research settings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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13. Support for school reentry and relationships between children with cancer, peers, and teachers.
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Soejima, Takafumi, Sato, Iori, Takita, Junko, Koh, Katsuyoshi, Maeda, Miho, Ida, Kohmei, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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COLLEGE teachers , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *INTERVIEWING , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL cooperation , *QUESTIONNAIRES , *RESEARCH , *TUMORS in children , *AFFINITY groups , *SOCIAL support , *RE-entry students , *CROSS-sectional method , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Background: Returning to school after a cancer diagnosis can be socially challenging for children with cancer. This study investigated the form of support for school reentry and the associations with social support from peers and teachers. Methods: This was a multicenter cross-sectional study. Children with cancer and their guardians completed questionnaires. Their guardians also underwent a semi-structured interview to describe the background of support for school reentry. Results: Thirty-nine children with cancer and guardian dyads completed questionnaires and three guardians underwent semi-structured interview. Peer visits and their understanding of hospital experiences and how to interact with children were related to social support from peers. Teachers' understanding of physical appearance, academic performance, hospital experience and of how to interact with children was related to social support from peers. Teachers' understanding of diagnosis/treatment, academic performance and their status as the liaison between doctors/nurses in hospitals and teachers in local schools were also related to social support from teachers. Furthermore, children with cancer were also encouraged to establish supportive relationships with peers and teachers as a result of school reentry support that (i) helped children to feel that they are still members of the local school; (ii) improved peer and teacher understanding of the long-term recovery process of children with cancer; and (iii) facilitated the children's own awareness that they are fighting the disease. Conclusions: The multidisciplinary team consisting of the children with cancer, their families, doctors, nurses and teachers in the local school need to communicate with peers regarding positive experiences of fighting, and overcoming, severe disease. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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14. Development of the Japanese version of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ Brain Tumor Module.
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Sato, Iori, Higuchi, Akiko, Yanagisawa, Takaaki, Mukasa, Akitake, Ida, Kohmei, Sawamura, Yutaka, Sugiyama, Kazuhiko, Saito, Nobuhito, Kumabe, Toshihiro, Terasaki, Mizuhiko, Nishikawa, Ryo, Ishida, Yasushi, and Kamibeppu, Kiyoko
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QUALITY of life , *BRAIN tumors , *CHILDREN'S health , *COGNITION , *QUESTIONNAIRES - Abstract
Background: The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory™ (PedsQL™) is a widely-used modular instrument for measuring health-related quality of life in children aged 2 to 18 years. The PedsQL™ Brain Tumor Module is comprised of six scales: Cognitive Problems, Pain and Hurt, Movement and Balance, Procedural Anxiety, Nausea, and Worry. In the present study, we developed the Japanese version of the PedsQL™ Brain Tumor Module and investigated its feasibility, reliability, and validity among Japanese children and their parents. Methods: Translation equivalence and content validity were verified using the standard back-translation method and cognitive debriefing tests. Participants were recruited from 6 hospitals in Japan and the Children's Cancer Association of Japan, and questionnaires were completed by 137 children with brain tumors and 166 parents. Feasibility of the questionnaire was determined based on the amount of time required to complete the form and the percentage of missing values. Internal consistency was assessed using Cronbach's coefficient alpha. Test-retest reliability was assessed by retesting 22 children and 27 parents. Factorial validity was verified by exploratory factor analyses. Known-groups validity was described with regard to whole brain irradiation, developmental impairment, infratentorial tumors, paresis, and concurrent chemotherapy. Convergent and discriminant validity were determined using Generic Core Scales and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for children. Results: Internal consistency was relatively high for all scales (Cronbach's coefficient alpha > 0.70) except the Pain and Hurt scale for the child-report, and sufficient test-retest reliability was demonstrated for all scales (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.45-0.95). Factorial validity was supported through exploratory factor analysis (factor-item correlation = 0.33-0.96 for children, 0.55-1.00 for parents). Evaluation of known-groups validity confirmed that the Cognitive Problems scale was sensitive for developmental impairment, the Movement and Balance scale for infratentorial tumors or paresis, and the Nausea scale for a patient currently undergoing chemotherapy. Convergent and discriminant validity with the PedsQL™ Generic Core Scales and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory for children were acceptable. Conclusions: The Japanese version of the PedsQL™ Brain Tumor Module is suitable for assessing health-related quality of life in children with brain tumors in clinical trials and research studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2010
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