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Do visually impaired children and their parents agree on the child's vision-related quality of life and functional vision?
- Tadić, Valerija;
- Cumberland, Phillippa M;
- Lewando-Hundt, Gillian;
- Rahi, Jugnoo S;
- Dale, Naomi;
- Khaw, Peng Tee;
- Moore, Anthony;
- Salt, Alison;
- Taylor, David;
- Brown, Corie;
- Craig, Marianne;
- Ennals, Christine;
- Keeley, Sarah;
- Thompson, Lucy;
- Osborne, Jackie;
- Sobti, Nidhi;
- Thomas, Paula;
- Thompson, Jude
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1136/bjophthalmol-2016-308582Abstract
Aims
To investigate agreement between children with visual impairment (VI) and their parents on their ratings of the child's vision-related quality of life (VQoL) and functional vision (FV) using two novel self-report patient-reported outcome measures developed for this population.Methods
99 children aged 10-15 years (mean age=12.2, SD=1.9) with VI (best corrected acuity (logarithm of the minimum angle of resolution) 0.50 or worse in better eye) and their parents participated in a national postal survey, completing the child and proxy versions of our novel instruments assessing VQoL and FV of children with VI-the vision-related quality of life instrument for children and young people (VQoL_CYP) and the functional vision questionnaire for children and young people (FVQ_CYP), respectively. Parent-child agreement was investigated using the Bland-Altman (BA) method. Variation across key sociodemographic and clinical characteristics was examined using the Intraclass Correlation Coefficient.Results
Average parental ratings of their child's VQoL and FV were significantly lower than the children's own ratings, but the range of disagreement was wide, with parents both overestimating and underestimating their child's VQoL (mean score difference=5.7, BA limits of agreement (LOA): lower -22.10 (CI 95% -24.61 to 19.59) and upper 33.50 (CI 95% 30.99 to 36.01)), but more consistently underestimating the child's FV (mean score difference=-11.8, BA LOA: lower -39.60 (CI 95% -42.12 to 37.08) and upper 16 (CI 95% 13.48 to 18.52)). There was variation in agreement by some child characteristics, including vision level, time of onset and course of VI progression.Conclusions
Visually impaired children and their parents perceive the broader impact of living with VI very differently. There is value in routine capture of information independently from children and their parents for comprehensively gauging the impact of childhood VI and tailoring appropriate interventions.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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