1. Quality of Life and Parental Worrying in a National Cohort of Biliary Atresia Children Living With Their Native Livers
- Author
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Hannu Jalanko, Timo Jahnukainen, Mikko P. Pakarinen, Silja Kosola, and Hanna Lampela
- Subjects
Male ,Parents ,Pediatrics ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Portoenterostomy, Hepatic ,Day care ,Anxiety ,030230 surgery ,National cohort ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Quality of life ,Biliary Atresia ,Biliary atresia ,Interquartile range ,medicine ,Health Status Indicators ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Child ,Parental distress ,Finland ,media_common ,business.industry ,Gastroenterology ,medicine.disease ,Transplantation ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Case-Control Studies ,Child, Preschool ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Quality of Life ,Female ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Worry ,business ,Stress, Psychological - Abstract
OBJECTIVES The aim of the study was to evaluate health-related quality of life (HRQoL) and parental distress in a national cohort of children with biliary atresia (BA) with their native livers in relation to BA complications and HRQoL of normal population controls. METHODS We invited all Finnish children with BA surviving with their native livers at age 2 to 18 years to participate in 2009 and in 2014. Parents filled the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL) proxy questionnaire, a survey of their child's health and evaluated parental distress on a visual-analog scale from 0 to 7. Overall participation rates were 80% (12/15) for the longitudinal and 83% (20/24) for the cross-sectional assessment. A control population of 324 children matched for age and sex was randomly picked, and 108 (33%) participated. RESULTS Overall, patients and controls had comparable HRQoL. Patients reported significantly lower scores for school functioning (P = 0.004) as depicted by missing school or day care due to hospital visits. Eighty-five percent of parents reported extreme worry (7.0) when hearing their child's BA diagnosis. At 6 years after diagnosis, parents reported significantly less worry: median score 3.8 (interquartile range 3.0-5.4, P
- Published
- 2017