Parent–Child Agreement of Child Health-Related Quality-of-Life in Maltreated Children

  • Paul Lanier
  • , Shenyang Guo
  • , Wendy Auslander
  • , Kathleen Gillespie
  • , Allison Dunnigan
  • , Patricia L. Kohl

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

This article examines the differences between self-reports and parent-proxy reports of pediatric health-related quality of life among families receiving child welfare services for child physical abuse and neglect. This study assesses child well-being using a pediatric health-related quality of life measure (Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory; PedsQL 4.0) with parent-child dyads (N = 129). Child and parent reports are compared for total and domain score on the PedsQL. Child-reported scores are lower than parent-proxy reports on total and all domain scores. For the total score, 57 % of child reports are below the clinical cutoff for poor well-being compared with 19 % of parent proxy reports. Analyses indicate poor agreement between parent and child reports, with this disagreement associated with high parent anger and parental self-report of poor mental health. Fully assessing child health and well-being requires multiple perspectives of child well-being. Gaining information from both the child and the parent provides different but equally useful information.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)781-795
Number of pages15
JournalChild Indicators Research
Volume10
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2017

Keywords

  • Child maltreatment
  • Child welfare
  • Child well-being
  • Quality of life

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