4.5 Article

not one size fits all The challenges of measuring paediatric health-related quality of life and the potential role of digital ecological momentary assessment: a qualitative study

Journal

QUALITY OF LIFE RESEARCH
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11136-023-03535-6

Keywords

Health-related quality of life; HRQoL; Paediatrics; Ecological momentary assessment; Digital health; Qualitative

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This study explores the challenges of measuring health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in children and examines whether digital ecological momentary assessment (EMA) could enhance HRQoL measurement. It highlights the uncertainty in conceptualizing HRQoL for children, challenges of proxy reporting, difficulties in interpreting change in HRQoL over time, and the potential benefits and challenges of using digital EMA. Future research is needed to further explore and develop this approach.
Purpose To explore the views of clinicians and researchers about the challenges of measuring health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in children (5-11 years) and to explore whether digital ecological momentary assessment (EMA) could enhance HRQoL measurement.Methods Semi-structured qualitative interviews with 18 professionals (10 academics/researchers, four clinicians, four with both professional backgrounds) experienced in child HRQoL measurement. We analysed data thematically.Results Theme One describes the uncertainty around conceptualising HRQoL for children and which domains to include; the greater immediacy and sensitivity of children's reflections on their HRQoL, leading to high variability of the construct; and the wide individual differences across childhood, incongruent with fixed HRQoL measures. Theme Two describes the challenges of proxy reporting, questioning whether proxies can meaningfully report a child's HRQoL and reflecting on discrepancies between child and proxy reporting. Theme Three covers the challenge of interpreting change in HRQoL over time; does a change in HRQoL reflect a change in health, or does this reflect developmental changes in how children report HRQoL. Theme Four discusses digital EMA for HRQoL data capture. In-the-moment, repeated measurement could provide rich data and address challenges of recall, ecological validity and variability; passive data could provide objective markers to supplement subjective responses; and technology could enable personalisation and child-centred design. However, participants also raised methodological, practical and ethical challenges of digital approaches.Conclusion Digital EMA may address some of the challenges of HRQoL data collection with children. We conclude by discussing potential future research to explore and develop this approach.

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