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The quality of life for cancer children (QOLCC) for Taiwanese children with cancer (part II): Feasibility, cross‐informants variance and clinical validity
28
Citations
15
References
2003
Year
Family MedicineQuality Of LifeCancer ChildrenLife AssessmentCeiling EffectCancer EducationOncologyAdolescent MedicineResearch InstrumentChild AssessmentCancer ResearchHealth SciencesChild Well-beingTaiwanese ChildrenPart IiChild DevelopmentPalliative CareChild HealthPediatricsMedicineChildhood Cancer
The quality of life in childhood cancer (QOLCC) is a research instrument that has been developed to assess the quality of life for children and adolescents who suffer from cancer in Taiwan. The current paper is the second of a two-part series of research reports. Part I is reported in this journal (Yeh et al., 2003). Part II describes the range of measurement, concordance of cross-informants reports, and clinical validity of Taiwanese pediatric cancer children (7-12 years) and adolescents (13-18 years) and their parents/caregivers. Due to the cognitive ability of children and adolescents, data were analyzed for children and adolescent separately. The validity of cross-referenced information between parent and child forms was subsequently examined using Pearson product correlation. The feasibility (percentage of missing values per item) and range of measurement [percentage of minimum (floor effect) and maximum (ceiling effect) possible scores] was calculated for the five QOLCC and the total scale score. The findings of medium to high correlation of the patient/parent responses strongly imply that relevant information might be obtainable through parents when children are unable or unwilling to complete the assessment instrument. Feasibility for the QOLCC was very good.
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