Back to Search Start Over

Quality-of-Life Measures in Children With Neurological Conditions

Authors :
Craig M. McDonald
Rita K. Bode
Gregory L. Holmes
Claudia S. Moy
David Cella
R. Ted Abresch
Erik K Henricson
Natalie McKinney
Cindy J. Nowinski
Don D. Straube
Tracy Podrabsky
Jin Shei Lai
David Victorson
Source :
Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair. 26:36-47
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
SAGE Publications, 2011.

Abstract

Background. A comprehensive, reliable, and valid measurement system is needed to monitor changes in children with neurological conditions who experience lifelong functional limitations. Objective. This article describes the development and psychometric properties of the pediatric version of the Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders (Neuro-QOL) measurement system. Methods. The pediatric Neuro-QOL consists of generic and targeted measures. Literature review, focus groups, individual interviews, cognitive interviews of children and consensus meetings were used to identify and finalize relevant domains and item content. Testing was conducted on 1018 children aged 10 to 17 years drawn from the US general population for generic measures and 171 similarly aged children with muscular dystrophy or epilepsy for targeted measures. Dimensionality was evaluated using factor analytic methods. For unidimensional domains, item parameters were estimated using item response theory models. Measures with acceptable fit indices were calibrated as item banks; those without acceptable fit indices were treated as summary scales. Results. Ten measures were developed: 8 generic or targeted banks (anxiety, depression, anger, interaction with peers, fatigue, pain, applied cognition, and stigma) and 2 generic scales (upper and lower extremity function). The banks reliably ( r > 0.90) measured 63.2% to 100% of the children tested. Conclusions. The pediatric Neuro-QOL is a comprehensive measurement system with acceptable psychometric properties that could be used in computerized adaptive testing. The next step is to validate these measures in various clinical populations.

Details

ISSN :
15526844 and 15459683
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurorehabilitation and Neural Repair
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fbc4478c4630c868320e003e5d13cd45
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/1545968311412054