How well they remember. The accuracy of parent reports.

OBJECTIVES To determine the range of accuracy of parent recall for many different events when compared with pediatrician's records and to establish whether good recall is associated with the nature of the event, period of recall, or demographic characteristics. RESEARCH DESIGN A nonconcurrent, descriptive survey of previous events. SETTING Two pediatric group practices in Montreal, Quebec. PARTICIPANTS Two hundred eighty-eight parents of children aged 1 to 13 years. INTERVENTIONS None. MEASUREMENTS/MAIN RESULTS Parents' responses to a self-administered questionnaire were compared with information extracted from pediatricians' records. The health events studied included asthma, bronchitis, otitis media, accidents, hospitalizations, office visits, and birth weight. Most parents (73%) were able to recall birth weight within 50 g, and 85% reported a frequency of hospitalizations that agreed exactly with the record. For asthma, bronchitis, and otitis in the last year, the percentages with good agreement were 91%, 85%, and 51%, respectively, while for the same disorders during the child's lifetime, the corresponding figures were 87%, 74%, and 53%, respectively. Each parent's responses were classified according to overall quality of agreement; associations between agreement and respondent characteristics were investigated. Mothers responded more accurately than fathers, and parents of younger children also showed better recall. Other factors, eg, education and occupation, were not significantly correlated with recall. CONCLUSIONS When compared with pediatricians' records, parent reports are generally acceptable for most research purposes and may be a better source for some health events such as accidents.

[1]  R. Haggerty,et al.  On the reliability of family health information: A comparative study of mothers' reports on illness and related behavior , 1967 .

[2]  D. Seidman,et al.  Accuracy of mothers' recall of birthweight and gestational age , 1987, British journal of obstetrics and gynaecology.

[3]  G. Parker Developmentally disabled, doubly disadvantaged , 1991, The Medical journal of Australia.

[4]  I. B. Pless,et al.  The organization and evaluation of a computer-assisted, centralized immunization registry. , 1983, American journal of public health.

[5]  K. Goddard,et al.  Reliability of pediatric histories. A preliminary study. , 1961, Pediatrics.

[6]  H. Bryant,et al.  Records, recall loss, and recall bias in pregnancy: a comparison of interview and medical records data of pregnant and postnatal women. , 1989, American journal of public health.

[7]  A. Coulter,et al.  accidents: a practice survey using general practitioners' records and parental reports , 2006 .

[8]  J. Macfarlane,et al.  The Accuracy of Mothers'Reports on Birth and Developmental Data , 1935 .

[9]  D. Seidman,et al.  Accuracy of the medical interview , 1987, British journal of obstetrics and gynaecology.

[10]  B. Alpert,et al.  Physical fitness in children: a survey method based on parental report. , 1988, American journal of public health.

[11]  S. Harlow,et al.  Agreement between questionnaire data and medical records. The evidence for accuracy of recall. , 1989, American journal of epidemiology.

[12]  A. Coulter,et al.  Accuracy of recall of surgical histories: a comparison of postal survey data and general practice records. , 1985, Community medicine.

[13]  R. Hoekelman,et al.  The Reliability of Maternal Recall , 1976, Clinical pediatrics.

[14]  S. Leeder,et al.  The validity of parental report of vaccination as a measure of a child's measles immunisation status , 1991, The Medical journal of Australia.

[15]  R. Lewis,et al.  Parental Recall After a Visit to the Emergency Department , 1994, Clinical pediatrics.

[16]  L C ROBBINS,et al.  The accuracy of parental recall of aspects of child development and of child rearing practices. , 1963, Journal of abnormal and social psychology.

[17]  F. Alexander,et al.  Mothers' reports of childhood vaccinations and infections and their concordance with general practitioner records. , 1991, Journal of public health medicine.

[18]  D. Hewson,et al.  Childbirth research data: medical records or women's reports? , 1987, American journal of epidemiology.