Clinical evaluation of the short-form pediatric enuresis module to assess quality of life

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Clinical evaluation of the short-form pediatric enuresis module to assess quality of life. / Bachmann, Christian; Ackmann, Conny; Janhsen, Ellen et al.

In: Neurourology and Urodynamics, Vol. 29, No. 8, 11.2010, p. 1397-1402.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Bachmann C, Ackmann C, Janhsen E, Steuber C, Bachmann H, Lehr D. Clinical evaluation of the short-form pediatric enuresis module to assess quality of life. Neurourology and Urodynamics. 2010 Nov;29(8):1397-1402. doi: 10.1002/nau.20896

Bibtex

@article{81892eb3db0e41298638e0f38e7f0f35,
title = "Clinical evaluation of the short-form pediatric enuresis module to assess quality of life",
abstract = "Aims: The aim of this study was to determine the psychometric properties of the German version of the Pediatric Enuresis Module to assess Quality of Life, Short Form (PEMQOL-SF) in a sample of parents of children with urinary incontinence. Methods: The parents of 88 children (63 male, 25 female, mean age: 9.3 [SD ± 2.5, range 6-18] years) with urinary incontinence were asked to complete the PEMQOL-SF. For evaluation of convergence validity, parents and children completed the respective versions of the DCGM-10 and the PinQ questionnaire. Results:Mean PEMQOL-SF scores were 72.2 [SD ± 14.1] (child impact scale) and 73.7 [SD ± 16.5] (family impact scale). The PEMQOL-SF had a Cronbach's alpha of 0.68 (child impact scale) and 0.80 (family impact scale), respectively. PEMQOL-SF child [family] impact scale scores correlated with the DCGM-10 with scores of r = 0.34 (r = 0.13; self-report version) and r = 0.63 (r = 0.48; proxy version) and with the PinQ with scores of r = -0.31 (r = -0.16; self-report version) and r = -0.63 (r = -0.54; proxy version), respectively. Conclusions The psychometric properties of the PEMQOL-SF were good for the family impact scale, but poor for the child impact scale. In its present form, the PEMQOL-SF cannot be recommended for routine clinical use. Nevertheless, a reduction of questionnaire items could lead to better psychometric properties.",
keywords = "children, daytime incontinence, health-related quality of life, monosymptomatic enuresis, non-monosymptomatic enuresis, PEMQOL-SF, validation, Psychology, Health sciences",
author = "Christian Bachmann and Conny Ackmann and Ellen Janhsen and Christian Steuber and Hannsj{\'o}rg Bachmann and Dirk Lehr",
year = "2010",
month = nov,
doi = "10.1002/nau.20896",
language = "English",
volume = "29",
pages = "1397--1402",
journal = "Neurourology and Urodynamics",
issn = "0733-2467",
publisher = "Wiley-Liss Inc.",
number = "8",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Clinical evaluation of the short-form pediatric enuresis module to assess quality of life

AU - Bachmann, Christian

AU - Ackmann, Conny

AU - Janhsen, Ellen

AU - Steuber, Christian

AU - Bachmann, Hannsjórg

AU - Lehr, Dirk

PY - 2010/11

Y1 - 2010/11

N2 - Aims: The aim of this study was to determine the psychometric properties of the German version of the Pediatric Enuresis Module to assess Quality of Life, Short Form (PEMQOL-SF) in a sample of parents of children with urinary incontinence. Methods: The parents of 88 children (63 male, 25 female, mean age: 9.3 [SD ± 2.5, range 6-18] years) with urinary incontinence were asked to complete the PEMQOL-SF. For evaluation of convergence validity, parents and children completed the respective versions of the DCGM-10 and the PinQ questionnaire. Results:Mean PEMQOL-SF scores were 72.2 [SD ± 14.1] (child impact scale) and 73.7 [SD ± 16.5] (family impact scale). The PEMQOL-SF had a Cronbach's alpha of 0.68 (child impact scale) and 0.80 (family impact scale), respectively. PEMQOL-SF child [family] impact scale scores correlated with the DCGM-10 with scores of r = 0.34 (r = 0.13; self-report version) and r = 0.63 (r = 0.48; proxy version) and with the PinQ with scores of r = -0.31 (r = -0.16; self-report version) and r = -0.63 (r = -0.54; proxy version), respectively. Conclusions The psychometric properties of the PEMQOL-SF were good for the family impact scale, but poor for the child impact scale. In its present form, the PEMQOL-SF cannot be recommended for routine clinical use. Nevertheless, a reduction of questionnaire items could lead to better psychometric properties.

AB - Aims: The aim of this study was to determine the psychometric properties of the German version of the Pediatric Enuresis Module to assess Quality of Life, Short Form (PEMQOL-SF) in a sample of parents of children with urinary incontinence. Methods: The parents of 88 children (63 male, 25 female, mean age: 9.3 [SD ± 2.5, range 6-18] years) with urinary incontinence were asked to complete the PEMQOL-SF. For evaluation of convergence validity, parents and children completed the respective versions of the DCGM-10 and the PinQ questionnaire. Results:Mean PEMQOL-SF scores were 72.2 [SD ± 14.1] (child impact scale) and 73.7 [SD ± 16.5] (family impact scale). The PEMQOL-SF had a Cronbach's alpha of 0.68 (child impact scale) and 0.80 (family impact scale), respectively. PEMQOL-SF child [family] impact scale scores correlated with the DCGM-10 with scores of r = 0.34 (r = 0.13; self-report version) and r = 0.63 (r = 0.48; proxy version) and with the PinQ with scores of r = -0.31 (r = -0.16; self-report version) and r = -0.63 (r = -0.54; proxy version), respectively. Conclusions The psychometric properties of the PEMQOL-SF were good for the family impact scale, but poor for the child impact scale. In its present form, the PEMQOL-SF cannot be recommended for routine clinical use. Nevertheless, a reduction of questionnaire items could lead to better psychometric properties.

KW - children

KW - daytime incontinence

KW - health-related quality of life

KW - monosymptomatic enuresis

KW - non-monosymptomatic enuresis

KW - PEMQOL-SF

KW - validation

KW - Psychology

KW - Health sciences

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=78349281868&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1002/nau.20896

DO - 10.1002/nau.20896

M3 - Journal articles

C2 - 20976814

AN - SCOPUS:78349281868

VL - 29

SP - 1397

EP - 1402

JO - Neurourology and Urodynamics

JF - Neurourology and Urodynamics

SN - 0733-2467

IS - 8

ER -

DOI