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Whose Life is it Anyway? Proxy v. Self reported quality of life in Childhood Cancer Survivors Penney Upton. What is Quality of Life?. ‘Subjective well-being' or ‘life satisfaction’ ‘Health related quality of life’ (HRQL) refers to how health affects life satisfaction
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Whose Life is it Anyway? Proxy v. Self reported quality of life in Childhood Cancer Survivors Penney Upton
What is Quality of Life? • ‘Subjective well-being' or ‘life satisfaction’ • ‘Health related quality of life’ (HRQL) refers to how health affects life satisfaction • Physical, social and emotional components of well-being and function
Why measure HRQL? • Changing emphasis in healthcare • Increased survivorship, but at a cost • Importance of patient perspective
How is it measured? • Disease specific questionnaires are sensitive to intervention effects • Broader generic measurement allows comparison to the general population
Issues in measurement • Developmental differences in the meaning of health • Limitations in cognitive or linguistic skills • Self or Proxy measure?
Why use a proxy measure? • If child is unwilling or unable to complete a self report • Parent report provides different perspective • Need both parent and child for a complete picture
Factors influencing parent-child agreement • Child and parent gender • Child age – child v. adolescent • Health status of the child • Component of HRQL being assessed
Unanswered questions in parent-child agreement • Is agreement better for observable physical or emotional functioning? • What is the direction of any differences in ratings? • What is the influence of child illness? • Group or individual analysis?
Aims • To examine the extent of mother-child agreement in HRQL reporting and the influence of child gender, age and health status on the extent and direction of agreement.
Method • A cross-sectional sample of children (age range 8-18 years) and their mothers completed the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL™) • 474 healthy children (213 males and 261 females) • 70 cancer survivors(35 males and 35 females)
Summary of Results • Mother-child agreement not associated with child age • Better agreement for females on the emotional functioning sub-scale • Better agreement for cancer survivors on all summary and subscales of PedsQL™
Comparison of mother-child agreement at individual level * P< 0.001
Comparison of mother-child agreement at group level • Group level analysis showed significant differences on all scales • Effect size of differences was trivial or small (d=0.03-0.23) • Mother’s of survivors more likely to underestimate HRQL
Implications of these findings • Mothers can provide an accurate estimate of their child’s HRQL using PedsQL • Proxies should be used where self-report is not available • May prevent research bias • Importance clinically - e.g. palliative care • Why is agreement is better where the child has survived cancer?
Why does child health influence agreement? • Focus on child health leads to: • Better communication • Increased parental knowledge and understanding of HRQL implications • Methodological issue?
A caveat to the use of parent reports: • Researchers/clinicians must be clear on what they want to gain from using a parent report • Are instructions to parents clear?
Conclusion: • Parents can provide a proxy report for their child, but the gold standard for reporting children’s HRQL should be self report as with adults……. …….whose life is it anyway?