• Eur J Oncol Nurs · Jul 2008

    Comparative Study

    Cancer in childhood: children's and parents' aspects for quality of life.

    • Vasiliki Matziou, Pantelis Perdikaris, Dimitra Feloni, Maria Moschovi, Maria Moshovi, Konstantinos Tsoumakas, and Anastasios Merkouris.
    • National and Kapodestrian University of Athens, Faculty of Nursing, Gr 115 27, Athens, Greece. vmatziou@nurs.uoa.gr
    • Eur J Oncol Nurs. 2008 Jul 1;12(3):209-16.

    IntroductionThe aim of the present study is to (a) describe the level of agreement between reports of health-related quality of life (HRQL) obtained from parents and young patients both on- and off-treatment and (b) explore the factors that may affect the level of agreement in the quality of life (QoL) between young patients and parental proxies.Patients And MethodsThe study group consisted of 149 young patients (77 children and 72 adolescents) with cancer followed up by an oncology in-patient clinic of a Greek children's hospital with one of their parents (n=298). After parental consent was obtained, data were collected using the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) and a sociodemographic data form.ResultsThe data collection showed that the best agreement was for the physical (ICC=0.82) and the school domains (ICC=0.68), whereas the worst was for the emotional (ICC=0.48) and the social domains (ICC=0.52). In the off-treatment group, the mother's age was a significant predictor of the child-proxy difference on the physical sub-scale (F=9.804, P=0.003). There was a negative relationship between the mother's age and patient proxy difference on the physical sub-scale. In the on-treatment group, the educational level of the father was found to be a significant predictor for the physical (F=4.30, P=0.041), school (F=5.51, P=0.022) and total sub-scales (F=10.41, P=0.002). Parents with basic education tended to have worse agreement with their children's reports on the physical and school sub-scales, while parents with higher education had worse agreement with their children's reports on the total sub-scale.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that the children and adolescents with cancer reported better QoL than their parents. The predictors found to be significant need to be examined extensively by further studies.

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