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Food allergy QoL questionnaire for children aged 0–12 years: content, construct, and cross‐cultural validity
Author(s) -
DunnGalvin A.,
De BlokFlokstra B. M. J.,
Burks A. W.,
Dubois A. E. J.,
Hourihane J. O'B.
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
clinical and experimental allergy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.462
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 1365-2222
pISSN - 0954-7894
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-2222.2008.02978.x
Subject(s) - cronbach's alpha , construct validity , food allergy , content validity , clinical psychology , quality of life (healthcare) , psychology , anxiety , medicine , psychometrics , allergy , psychiatry , immunology , psychotherapist
Summary Background To date, there is no food allergy‐specific questionnaire that allows parents to report children's health‐related QoL (HRQL) from the child's perspective . Objective The aim of this study was to develop a sensitive, multi‐dimensional measure to assess parental perception of HRQL in children aged 0–12 years with food allergy. Methods The Food Allergy QoL – Parent Form (FAQLQ‐PF) was developed and validated in four stages: (1) item generation using focus groups, expert opinion, and literature review; (2) item reduction, using clinical impact and factor analysis; (3) internal and test–retest reliability and construct validity were evaluated using relevant scales of the Child Health Questionnaire (CHQ)‐28 and the disease‐specific food allergy independent measure (FAIM); and (4) cross‐cultural and content validity was examined by administering the questionnaire in a US sample. Results Stage 1 : Saturation was reached at 110 items. Stage 2 : The reduced instrument has 14 items for children <4 years and 26 and 30 items for children aged 4–6 years and 7–12 years, respectively. Factor analysis revealed three subscales: emotional impact, food anxiety, and social and dietary limitations, accounting for 68% of the variance. Stage 3 : Cronbach's α >0.7 for subscales and total score. Construct validity was demonstrated by significant correlations between relevant scales of the CHQ‐28 and FAQLQ‐PF subscales ( r =0.69–0.77, P <0.01), and between FAQLQ‐PF subscales and the FAIM. Sensitivity was shown by significant within‐group differences in a sample of 124 food‐allergic children. Stage 4 : The FAQLQ‐PF was validated in a sample of US children, Cronbach's α >0.7 for subscales and total score. Construct validity was demonstrated by significant correlations between FAQLQ‐PF and the FAIM (parent report) and between the FAQLQ‐PF and the FAIM (child report). No differences were observed between the US and Irish scores. Conclusion The FAQLQ‐PF is psychometrically robust, with excellent reliability and validity.