Copyright ©ERS Journals Ltd 2001 Parents' quality of life and respiratory symptoms in young children with mild wheeze1 Dept of Medicine and Therapeutics and 2 Dept of Child Health, University of Aberdeen CORRESPONDENCE: L.M. Osman, Chest Clinic (Clinic C), Aberdeen Royal Infirmary, Aberdeen, AB25 2ZN, UK. Fax: 44 1224840766 Keywords: asthma, children, quality of life
Received: February 25, 2000
This study was funded by the National Health Service Health Technology Assessment Programme, UK.
The Paediatric Asthma Caregiver's Quality of Life Questionnaire (PACQLQ), measures the impact of child asthma symptoms on family activity (CGAct) and parental anxiety (CGEmot). It has not been validated for families of children <7 yrs, with wheezing illness. This study assessed the sensitivity of the PACQLQ to symptom change in 62 preschool children with wheezing illness. The median age of children was 3 yrs (range 0.86 yrs). At entry and 3-month follow-up, parents recorded child respiratory symptoms in a 1-month diary and completed the PACQLQ. On average, children in the study had 7 symptomatic days per month.
On entry, mothers
It is concluded that the Paediatric Asthma Caregiver's Quality of Life Questionnaire is sensitive to group measures of child symptom change over 3 months, among preschool children, and this supports its use as an outcome measure in clinical trials. The absolute impact of child symptoms on parent quality of life varies among parents.
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