Agreement between adolescent self-report and parent reports of health and well-being: results of an epidemiological study.


Autoria(s): Waters, Elizabeth; Stewart-Brown, S; Fitzpatrick, R
Data(s)

30/10/2003

Resumo

<b>Objective </b> To examine parent and adolescent agreement on physical, emotional, mental and social health and well-being in a representative population.<br /><b>Methodology </b>An epidemiological design was used to obtain parent–child/adolescent dyad data on comparable items and scales of a generic measure of health and well-being, the Child Health Questionnaire (parent/proxy report 50 item, self-report 80 item). Scale analysis included intraclass correlations (ICCs) to examine strength of parent–child associations and independent t-tests for differences between adolescents (with or without an illness). Where there were significant differences in scale scores, analysis of variance and two sample t-tests were used to examine the influence of social, demographic, health concern and school variables. Single items were examined for trends in response categories.<br /><b>Results </b> 2096 parent–adolescent dyads (adolescent mean age of 15.1 years, males 50%, maternal parent 83.2%, biological parent 93.5%). ICCs were strong. Overall, adolescents reported poorer emotional and social health, and clinically significant differences were observed for perceptions of general health (mean difference 8.1/100), frequency and amount of body pain (5.94/100), experience of mental health (5.14/100), and impact of health on family activities (12.43/100), which widen significantly for adolescents with illness. Social, health and school enjoyment and performance significantly widened parent–child differences.<br /><b>Conclusions</b> All adolescents were much less optimistic about their health and well-being than their parents, and were only in close agreement on aspects of health and well-being they rated highly. Adolescent reports are more likely to be sensitive to pain, mental health problems, health in general and the impact of their health on family activities.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30004294

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Blackwell Publishing Ltd

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30004294/n20070354.pdf

http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2214.2003.00370.x

Direitos

2003, Blackwell Publishers Ltd

Palavras-Chave #self-report #parent #adolescent #health status #measurement
Tipo

Journal Article