Experiencing health-related quality of life in paediatric short stature - a cross-cultural analysis of statements from patients and parents

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Experiencing health-related quality of life in paediatric short stature - a cross-cultural analysis of statements from patients and parents. / Sommer, Rachel; Bullinger, Monika; Chaplin, John; Do, Ju-Ky; Power, Mick; Pleil, Andreas; Quitmann, Julia.

in: CLIN PSYCHOL PSYCHOT, Jahrgang 24, Nr. 6, 2017, S. 1370-1376.

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@article{f9a544e1b82f49c7ba6427e3f34b8eda,
title = "Experiencing health-related quality of life in paediatric short stature - a cross-cultural analysis of statements from patients and parents",
abstract = "OBJECTIVES: Direct assessment of the patient perspective is necessary to thoroughly understand patients' experiences of disease. We aimed to examine information from children with short stature on their perceived HrQoL within 5 European countries.METHODS: Patients, identified through clinical databases, were approached by their clinicians according to the inclusion criteria regarding a diagnosis of growth hormone deficiency or idiopathic short stature and age requirements. A focus group methodology was applied in 84 children and 112 parents. Based on a category system, individual statements were allocated to domains. To evaluate the emerging topics, qualitative content analysis was conducted. Domains and respective coding frequencies per category were compared across countries and respondents.RESULTS: The highest number of statements produced by the children and parents were related to social (29%) and emotional needs and concerns (28%). In particular, children stressed their experience of social exclusion but also their perception of social support. Regarding emotional needs, they stated mainly the desire to be taller in order to be less teased by peers. National differences were identified, for example, Swedish (22%) and British (16%) children and their parents (Sweden 26%; Britain 23%) stressed physical HrQoL aspects, whereas German children (21%) strongly focused on treatment aspects, mainly the benefit of treatment.CONCLUSION: Comprehensive knowledge of the impact of a chronic condition such as short stature on wellbeing is an important precondition of effective treatment. Because socioemotional topics were rated in all the countries to be most important, interventions aimed at improving HrQoL should target social and emotional responses to short stature. Key Practitioner Messages Focus group discussions have been shown to be a useful method for children with short stature and their parents to describe, communicate, prioritize and present aspects of health-related quality of life to health care professionals. Social and emotional aspects of living with short stature are the most frequently discussed topics by children as well as by parents across countries; these topics provide important objectives for tailoring appropriate psychosocial interventions. Clinicians should consider both child and parent concerns, include psychosocial screening tools and propose appropriate referral options for patients and family members.",
keywords = "Journal Article",
author = "Rachel Sommer and Monika Bullinger and John Chaplin and Ju-Ky Do and Mick Power and Andreas Pleil and Julia Quitmann",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.",
year = "2017",
doi = "10.1002/cpp.2105",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "1370--1376",
journal = "CLIN PSYCHOL PSYCHOT",
issn = "1063-3995",
publisher = "John Wiley and Sons Ltd",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Experiencing health-related quality of life in paediatric short stature - a cross-cultural analysis of statements from patients and parents

AU - Sommer, Rachel

AU - Bullinger, Monika

AU - Chaplin, John

AU - Do, Ju-Ky

AU - Power, Mick

AU - Pleil, Andreas

AU - Quitmann, Julia

N1 - Copyright © 2017 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

PY - 2017

Y1 - 2017

N2 - OBJECTIVES: Direct assessment of the patient perspective is necessary to thoroughly understand patients' experiences of disease. We aimed to examine information from children with short stature on their perceived HrQoL within 5 European countries.METHODS: Patients, identified through clinical databases, were approached by their clinicians according to the inclusion criteria regarding a diagnosis of growth hormone deficiency or idiopathic short stature and age requirements. A focus group methodology was applied in 84 children and 112 parents. Based on a category system, individual statements were allocated to domains. To evaluate the emerging topics, qualitative content analysis was conducted. Domains and respective coding frequencies per category were compared across countries and respondents.RESULTS: The highest number of statements produced by the children and parents were related to social (29%) and emotional needs and concerns (28%). In particular, children stressed their experience of social exclusion but also their perception of social support. Regarding emotional needs, they stated mainly the desire to be taller in order to be less teased by peers. National differences were identified, for example, Swedish (22%) and British (16%) children and their parents (Sweden 26%; Britain 23%) stressed physical HrQoL aspects, whereas German children (21%) strongly focused on treatment aspects, mainly the benefit of treatment.CONCLUSION: Comprehensive knowledge of the impact of a chronic condition such as short stature on wellbeing is an important precondition of effective treatment. Because socioemotional topics were rated in all the countries to be most important, interventions aimed at improving HrQoL should target social and emotional responses to short stature. Key Practitioner Messages Focus group discussions have been shown to be a useful method for children with short stature and their parents to describe, communicate, prioritize and present aspects of health-related quality of life to health care professionals. Social and emotional aspects of living with short stature are the most frequently discussed topics by children as well as by parents across countries; these topics provide important objectives for tailoring appropriate psychosocial interventions. Clinicians should consider both child and parent concerns, include psychosocial screening tools and propose appropriate referral options for patients and family members.

AB - OBJECTIVES: Direct assessment of the patient perspective is necessary to thoroughly understand patients' experiences of disease. We aimed to examine information from children with short stature on their perceived HrQoL within 5 European countries.METHODS: Patients, identified through clinical databases, were approached by their clinicians according to the inclusion criteria regarding a diagnosis of growth hormone deficiency or idiopathic short stature and age requirements. A focus group methodology was applied in 84 children and 112 parents. Based on a category system, individual statements were allocated to domains. To evaluate the emerging topics, qualitative content analysis was conducted. Domains and respective coding frequencies per category were compared across countries and respondents.RESULTS: The highest number of statements produced by the children and parents were related to social (29%) and emotional needs and concerns (28%). In particular, children stressed their experience of social exclusion but also their perception of social support. Regarding emotional needs, they stated mainly the desire to be taller in order to be less teased by peers. National differences were identified, for example, Swedish (22%) and British (16%) children and their parents (Sweden 26%; Britain 23%) stressed physical HrQoL aspects, whereas German children (21%) strongly focused on treatment aspects, mainly the benefit of treatment.CONCLUSION: Comprehensive knowledge of the impact of a chronic condition such as short stature on wellbeing is an important precondition of effective treatment. Because socioemotional topics were rated in all the countries to be most important, interventions aimed at improving HrQoL should target social and emotional responses to short stature. Key Practitioner Messages Focus group discussions have been shown to be a useful method for children with short stature and their parents to describe, communicate, prioritize and present aspects of health-related quality of life to health care professionals. Social and emotional aspects of living with short stature are the most frequently discussed topics by children as well as by parents across countries; these topics provide important objectives for tailoring appropriate psychosocial interventions. Clinicians should consider both child and parent concerns, include psychosocial screening tools and propose appropriate referral options for patients and family members.

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1002/cpp.2105

DO - 10.1002/cpp.2105

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 28675583

VL - 24

SP - 1370

EP - 1376

JO - CLIN PSYCHOL PSYCHOT

JF - CLIN PSYCHOL PSYCHOT

SN - 1063-3995

IS - 6

ER -