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Parents and their cochlear implanted child: questionnaire development to assess parental views and experiences

Parents and their cochlear implanted child: questionnaire development to assess parental views and experiences
Parents and their cochlear implanted child: questionnaire development to assess parental views and experiences
Objectives: To test the reliability of a validated closed-format questionnaire assessing parental views following cochlear implantation of their child. Design: Parents were surveyed using a closed-format questionnaire developed in earlier work. The same parents were surveyed 1 month later and responses compared. Test–retest reliability was thereby assessed. Setting: Tertiary referral Pediatric Cochlear Implant Centre in the UK. Subjects and Methods: The parents of 20 children who had been born deaf or were deafened by age 3 years and who had been implanted for at least 2 years were drawn at random from patient lists. Parents were surveyed using a closed-format questionnaire whose validity had been previously assessed and re-surveyed 1 month later. Responses over time were compared. Results: For the majority of items in the questionnaire, the replication of the item would lead to the same response on at least 95% of occasions. The text of the closed-format questionnaire is reproduced in full. Conclusion: This validated closed-format questionnaire appears to be unique in respect of cochlear implantation, being based explicitly on issues thought important by the parents. The high test–retest reliability indicates that it is capable of eliciting parental views in a meaningful manner. This information that is not currently available by other means can then be used as part of an overall assessment of outcomes, to inform efforts aimed at quality improvement as well as demonstrating accountability to purchasers and policymakers. Moreover, a wider use of this instrument can result in valid comparisons of outcomes among different cochlear implant centres.
cochlear implants, children, deaf, parents, perception, outcomes, quality of life
0165-5876
149-60
O'Neill, Ciaran
70c80700-8e13-4812-9068-0a970dc7f20a
Lutman, Mark E.
Archbold, Sue M.
ef7e272b-ecbc-4479-94c4-668b080aab27
Gregory, Sue
d60be9a3-68dc-48c6-b003-6ac49ca0ab93
Nikolopoulos, Thomas P.
98375d72-cb35-413e-b575-5f962cfc1720
O'Neill, Ciaran
70c80700-8e13-4812-9068-0a970dc7f20a
Lutman, Mark E.
Archbold, Sue M.
ef7e272b-ecbc-4479-94c4-668b080aab27
Gregory, Sue
d60be9a3-68dc-48c6-b003-6ac49ca0ab93
Nikolopoulos, Thomas P.
98375d72-cb35-413e-b575-5f962cfc1720

O'Neill, Ciaran, Lutman, Mark E., Archbold, Sue M., Gregory, Sue and Nikolopoulos, Thomas P. (2004) Parents and their cochlear implanted child: questionnaire development to assess parental views and experiences. International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology, 68, 149-60. (doi:10.1016/j.ijporl.2003.09.015).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: To test the reliability of a validated closed-format questionnaire assessing parental views following cochlear implantation of their child. Design: Parents were surveyed using a closed-format questionnaire developed in earlier work. The same parents were surveyed 1 month later and responses compared. Test–retest reliability was thereby assessed. Setting: Tertiary referral Pediatric Cochlear Implant Centre in the UK. Subjects and Methods: The parents of 20 children who had been born deaf or were deafened by age 3 years and who had been implanted for at least 2 years were drawn at random from patient lists. Parents were surveyed using a closed-format questionnaire whose validity had been previously assessed and re-surveyed 1 month later. Responses over time were compared. Results: For the majority of items in the questionnaire, the replication of the item would lead to the same response on at least 95% of occasions. The text of the closed-format questionnaire is reproduced in full. Conclusion: This validated closed-format questionnaire appears to be unique in respect of cochlear implantation, being based explicitly on issues thought important by the parents. The high test–retest reliability indicates that it is capable of eliciting parental views in a meaningful manner. This information that is not currently available by other means can then be used as part of an overall assessment of outcomes, to inform efforts aimed at quality improvement as well as demonstrating accountability to purchasers and policymakers. Moreover, a wider use of this instrument can result in valid comparisons of outcomes among different cochlear implant centres.

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More information

Published date: February 2004
Keywords: cochlear implants, children, deaf, parents, perception, outcomes, quality of life
Organisations: Human Sciences Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 28013
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/28013
ISSN: 0165-5876
PURE UUID: 665d97dc-41d6-4a18-9457-81e7c0a21978

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Date deposited: 28 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:22

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Contributors

Author: Ciaran O'Neill
Author: Mark E. Lutman
Author: Sue M. Archbold
Author: Sue Gregory
Author: Thomas P. Nikolopoulos

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