Qualitative observation instrument to measure the quality of parent-child interactions in young children with type 1 diabetes mellitus

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Abstract

Background: In young children with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), parents have complete responsibility for the diabetes-management. In toddlers and (pre)schoolers, the tasks needed to achieve optimal blood glucose control may interfere with normal developmental processes and could negatively affect the quality of parent-child interaction. Several observational instruments are available to measure the quality of the parent-child interaction. However, no observational instrument for diabetes-specific situations is available. Therefore, the aim of the present study was to develop a qualitative observation instrument, to be able to assess parent-child interaction during diabetes-specific situations.Methods: First, in a pilot study (n = 15), the observation instrument was developed in four steps: (a) defining relevant diabetes-specific situations; (b) videotaping these situations; (c) describing all behaviors in a qualitative observation instrument; (d) evaluating usability and reliability. Next, we examined preliminary validity (total n = 77) by testing hypotheses about correlations between the observation instrument for diabetes-specific situations, a generic observation instrument and a behavioral questionnaire.Results: The observation instrument to assess parent-child interaction during diabetes-specific situations, which consists of ten domains: " emotional involvement" , " limit setting" , " respect for autonomy" , " quality of instruction" , " negative behavior" , " avoidance" , " cooperative behavior" , " child's response to injection" , " emphasis on diabetes" , and " mealtime structure" , was developed for use during a mealtime situation (including glucose monitoring and insulin administration).Conclusions: The present study showed encouraging indications for the usability and inter-rater reliability (weighted kappa was 0.73) of the qualitative observation instrument. Furthermore, promising indications for the preliminary validity of the observation instrument for diabetes-specific situations were found (r ranged between |.24| and |.45| for significant correlations and between |.10| and |.23| for non-significant trends). This observation instrument could be used in future research to (a) test whether parent-child interactions are associated with outcomes (like HbA1c levels and psychosocial functioning), and (b) evaluate interventions, aimed at optimizing the quality of parent-child interactions in families with a young child with T1DM. © 2014 Nieuwesteeg et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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Nieuwesteeg, A., Hartman, E., Pouwer, F., Emons, W., Aanstoot, H. J., Van Mil, E., & Van Bakel, H. (2014). Qualitative observation instrument to measure the quality of parent-child interactions in young children with type 1 diabetes mellitus. BMC Pediatrics, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2431-14-145

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