Objective: The aims of this study were to assess the level of agreement and the magnitude of discrepancies between children and their parents, and whether these levels of agreement/discrepancy depend on the country of living, the domains of quality of life assessed, the age and gender of the children, and other background variables. Study Design and Setting: The KIDSCREEN pilot study involved 2,526 youth-proxy pairs in seven European countries. The health-related quality of life (HRQoL) of children and their parents as proxy has been assessed in parallel using a 10-dimension KIDSCREEN-52 Pilot test questionnaire. Results: For the 10 dimensions, the mean difference between proxy and youth score decreases as the HRQoL level increases. Physica...
textabstractBackground: Discrepancy between self-reports and parent-proxy reports of adolescent heal...
Background: Comprehensive evidence exists regarding the discrepancy between children's reports and p...
OBJECTIVES: To determine age and gender differences in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in chi...
Background: Few studies have evaluated changes on parent–child agreement in HRQOL over time. The obj...
Objective: This study assesses the reliability and validity of the European KIDSCREEN-52 generic hea...
Purpose: The KIDSCREEN project aims to develop a European cross-cultural generic self-administered H...
BACKGROUND There is an on-going debate about who is the most appropriate informant for rating child...
The aim of this study was to evaluate the agreement between children and proxies as well as the agre...
Background: The aim of this study is to quantify the level of agreement between self-reporting an...
This study evaluates the agreement between child and parent reports on children's health-related qua...
Abstract Background The aim of this study is to quantify the level of agreement between self-reporti...
Objective: To assess the construct and criterion validity of the KIDSCREEN-27 health-related quality...
OBJECTIVES: The differences between child self-reports and parent proxy reports of quality of life i...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the construct and criterion validity of the KIDSCREEN-27 health-related quality...
Background The KIDSCREEN-27 is a measure of child and adolescent quality of life (QoL), with excelle...
textabstractBackground: Discrepancy between self-reports and parent-proxy reports of adolescent heal...
Background: Comprehensive evidence exists regarding the discrepancy between children's reports and p...
OBJECTIVES: To determine age and gender differences in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in chi...
Background: Few studies have evaluated changes on parent–child agreement in HRQOL over time. The obj...
Objective: This study assesses the reliability and validity of the European KIDSCREEN-52 generic hea...
Purpose: The KIDSCREEN project aims to develop a European cross-cultural generic self-administered H...
BACKGROUND There is an on-going debate about who is the most appropriate informant for rating child...
The aim of this study was to evaluate the agreement between children and proxies as well as the agre...
Background: The aim of this study is to quantify the level of agreement between self-reporting an...
This study evaluates the agreement between child and parent reports on children's health-related qua...
Abstract Background The aim of this study is to quantify the level of agreement between self-reporti...
Objective: To assess the construct and criterion validity of the KIDSCREEN-27 health-related quality...
OBJECTIVES: The differences between child self-reports and parent proxy reports of quality of life i...
OBJECTIVE: To assess the construct and criterion validity of the KIDSCREEN-27 health-related quality...
Background The KIDSCREEN-27 is a measure of child and adolescent quality of life (QoL), with excelle...
textabstractBackground: Discrepancy between self-reports and parent-proxy reports of adolescent heal...
Background: Comprehensive evidence exists regarding the discrepancy between children's reports and p...
OBJECTIVES: To determine age and gender differences in health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in chi...