Development and validation of the distress thermometer for parents of a chronically ill child
Development and validation of the distress thermometer for parents of a chronically ill child
Objective: To develop and validate a Distress Thermometer for Parents (DT-P) for chronically ill children and to determine a cutoff score for clinical distress.
Study design: Parents of a chronically ill child (0-18 years) were recruited via announcements or were actively approached at the outpatient clinics of the Emma Children's Hospital/Academic Medical Center and Vrije Universiteit Medical Center. We modeled the development of the DT-P on the Distress Thermometer used in oncology medical care. The DT-P consists of a thermometer score from 0 (no distress) to 10 (extreme distress) and a problem list (practical, social, emotional, physical, cognitive, and parenting domains). The DT-P was validated with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and the Parenting Stress Index.
Results: The mean thermometer score of the 706 participating parents was 3.7 (SD 3.0). The thermometer score and the scores in the practical, emotional, physical, and cognitive problem domains were strongly related to anxiety, depression, and the total score of the HADS (0.55 ? r ? 0.72). The thermometer score and all problem domain scores were moderately-to-strongly related to the Parenting Stress Index (0.38 ? r ? 0.63). A cutoff-score of 4 correctly identified 86% of "clinical HADS cases" (sensitivity) and 67% of "nonclinical HADS cases" (specificity).
Conclusion: We developed the DT-P and examined its diagnostic utility in a large sample. The DT-P appeared to be a valid and useful short screening-tool for identifying parental distress.
DT, distress thermometer, DT-P, distress thermometer for parents, HADS, hospital anxiety and depression scale, PSI, parenting stress index, ROC, receiver operating characteristics, VU, vrije universiteit
1140-1146.e2
Haverman, Lotte
e556218f-a9c3-45ba-b384-9655a3ce4d57
van Oers, Hedy A.
c6f42095-f8b8-4911-8a11-92c66c98545f
Limperg, Perrine F.
8e39a906-09db-4c5c-a62c-6c38b4ae7a09
Houtzager, Bregje A.
001c503b-a5c3-4e9c-a572-cecfd9e903d6
Huisman, Jaap
5cd75c39-386b-45e4-b5b1-ab75d8f6cb3c
Darlington, Anne-Sophie
472fcfc9-160b-4344-8113-8dd8760ff962
Maurice-Stam, Heleen
517fcd44-0add-4987-969a-2f6512e24dd7
Grootenhuis, Martha A.
a2fbe577-d81b-41d1-86f5-d7c0beab16dd
Haverman, Lotte
e556218f-a9c3-45ba-b384-9655a3ce4d57
van Oers, Hedy A.
c6f42095-f8b8-4911-8a11-92c66c98545f
Limperg, Perrine F.
8e39a906-09db-4c5c-a62c-6c38b4ae7a09
Houtzager, Bregje A.
001c503b-a5c3-4e9c-a572-cecfd9e903d6
Huisman, Jaap
5cd75c39-386b-45e4-b5b1-ab75d8f6cb3c
Darlington, Anne-Sophie
472fcfc9-160b-4344-8113-8dd8760ff962
Maurice-Stam, Heleen
517fcd44-0add-4987-969a-2f6512e24dd7
Grootenhuis, Martha A.
a2fbe577-d81b-41d1-86f5-d7c0beab16dd
Haverman, Lotte, van Oers, Hedy A., Limperg, Perrine F., Houtzager, Bregje A., Huisman, Jaap, Darlington, Anne-Sophie, Maurice-Stam, Heleen and Grootenhuis, Martha A.
(2013)
Development and validation of the distress thermometer for parents of a chronically ill child.
Journal of Pediatrics, 163 (4), .
(doi:10.1016/j.jpeds.2013.06.011).
(PMID:23910979)
Abstract
Objective: To develop and validate a Distress Thermometer for Parents (DT-P) for chronically ill children and to determine a cutoff score for clinical distress.
Study design: Parents of a chronically ill child (0-18 years) were recruited via announcements or were actively approached at the outpatient clinics of the Emma Children's Hospital/Academic Medical Center and Vrije Universiteit Medical Center. We modeled the development of the DT-P on the Distress Thermometer used in oncology medical care. The DT-P consists of a thermometer score from 0 (no distress) to 10 (extreme distress) and a problem list (practical, social, emotional, physical, cognitive, and parenting domains). The DT-P was validated with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and the Parenting Stress Index.
Results: The mean thermometer score of the 706 participating parents was 3.7 (SD 3.0). The thermometer score and the scores in the practical, emotional, physical, and cognitive problem domains were strongly related to anxiety, depression, and the total score of the HADS (0.55 ? r ? 0.72). The thermometer score and all problem domain scores were moderately-to-strongly related to the Parenting Stress Index (0.38 ? r ? 0.63). A cutoff-score of 4 correctly identified 86% of "clinical HADS cases" (sensitivity) and 67% of "nonclinical HADS cases" (specificity).
Conclusion: We developed the DT-P and examined its diagnostic utility in a large sample. The DT-P appeared to be a valid and useful short screening-tool for identifying parental distress.
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e-pub ahead of print date: 30 July 2013
Keywords:
DT, distress thermometer, DT-P, distress thermometer for parents, HADS, hospital anxiety and depression scale, PSI, parenting stress index, ROC, receiver operating characteristics, VU, vrije universiteit
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 355757
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/355757
ISSN: 0022-3476
PURE UUID: c76f0de2-0b25-4f52-9959-9a7b9f48bde0
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Date deposited: 04 Sep 2013 12:43
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 14:37
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Contributors
Author:
Lotte Haverman
Author:
Hedy A. van Oers
Author:
Perrine F. Limperg
Author:
Bregje A. Houtzager
Author:
Jaap Huisman
Author:
Heleen Maurice-Stam
Author:
Martha A. Grootenhuis
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