Differences between child and parent reports of symptoms among Latino children with asthma.

OBJECTIVES To determine, in a population of predominantly Latino children with asthma 6 to 18 years old, whether parent and child reports of asthma symptoms with exercise differ and to evaluate the validity of child and parent reports of symptoms. DESIGN Data obtained from child and parent interviews; pulmonary function tests (forced vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in 1 second, forced expiratory flow25-75, peak expiratory flow), and observation of symptoms after exercise. SETTING Three summer camps for minority children with asthma in Los Angeles County. PARTICIPANTS A total of 97 children with asthma (78% Latino, 12% non-Latino White, 9% Other; 6 to 18 years of age) and their parents. INTERVENTION(S) None. PRIMARY OUTCOME MEASURES Child and parent reports of cough and wheezing with exercise and pulmonary function tests before and after exercise. While at camp, children underwent spirometry after completing the self-administered survey. The pulmonary function tests were conducted and interpreted according to the pediatric specifications for spirometry, and results >80% of predicted, adjusted for gender, age, height, and race, were considered normal. Six peak expiratory flow rates (PEFR) by peak flow meter also were recorded by trained research assistants immediately before spirometry, and values >80% of predicted based on height were considered normal. To observe child symptoms with exercise, children participated in a relay running race of 200 feet followed by a swimming race of 300 feet. Research assistants measured heart rate and 6 PEFRs using ASSESS portable peak flow meters immediately before and after each exercise. A positive exercise challenge was defined as a 15% reduction in mean PEFR and/or observed asthma symptoms (cough, wheezing, chest pain, asthma attack). RESULTS Of the children, 18% reported never having a cough when they exercised, 46% reported having it occasionally when they exercised, and 36% reported having it quite often or always when they exercised. For wheezing, 20% of children reported never having wheezing when they exercised, 35% having it occasionally when they exercised, and 45% having it quite often or always when they exercised. Parents reported fewer symptoms than did their children. Of the parents, 34% reported that their children did not have cough with exercise, 37% reported few to some days, and 29% reported most days or every day. Forty-seven percent of parents reported that their child did not wheeze with exercise in the last 2 months, 35% reported wheezing on a few days to some days, and 17% reported wheezing most days to every day. Parent and child reports of cough or wheezing after exercise correlated mildly with each other (parent/child cough r = 0. 23; kappa = 0.03; parent/child wheezing r = 0.21; kappa = 0.14). Children were more likely to report cough: 59 of 71 (83%) of children versus 44 of 71 (62%) of parents. The 22 children who reported cough when their parents did not account for most of the disagreement between parents and children. Children were more likely than were their parents to report wheezing; 55 of 69 (80%) children versus 36 of 69 (52%) parents reported that the child wheezed. The 24 children who reported wheezing when their parents did not account for most of the disagreement between parents and children. Forty-seven percent of the children had a value <80% of predicted for at least one of the four spirometry tests; 29% of mean baseline PEFRs were <80% of predicted. Overall, 86% of the children met one or more of the following: any percent of predicted pulmonary function tests <80% or any symptom or PEFR reduction of 15% after exercise, or other occurrence of nonexercise symptoms during camp. Almost all child reports of cough and wheezing correlated significantly with the criterion validity criteria. For example, child reports of wheezing were, as expected, correlated negatively with the percent of predicted FEV1 (r = -0.28) and correlated positive

[1]  R. J. Thompson,et al.  Mother-child agreement on the child assessment schedule with nonreferred children: a research note. , 1993, Journal of child psychology and psychiatry, and allied disciplines.

[2]  M. Siegal Knowing Children: Experiments in Conversation and Cognition , 1991 .

[3]  M. Christie,et al.  Development of child‐centered disease‐specific questionnaires for living with asthma. , 1993, Psychosomatic medicine.

[4]  P. Newacheck,et al.  Childhood asthma and poverty: differential impacts and utilization of health services. , 1993, Pediatrics.

[5]  Jacob Cohen A Coefficient of Agreement for Nominal Scales , 1960 .

[6]  J. R. Landis,et al.  A one-way components of variance model for categorical data , 1977 .

[7]  I B Pless,et al.  How well they remember. The accuracy of parent reports. , 1995, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[8]  Gregory K. Fritz,et al.  Patterns of response to childhood asthma. , 1989, Psychosomatic medicine.

[9]  G. Canino,et al.  Epidemiological comparisons of Puerto Rican and U.S. mainland children: parent, teacher, and self-reports. , 1990, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[10]  R. Touloukian,et al.  Midgut volvulus. An ever-present threat. , 1994, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[11]  P. Bijur,et al.  An estimate of the prevalence of asthma and wheezing among inner-city children. , 1994, Pediatrics.

[12]  W. Reich,et al.  Development of a structured psychiatric Interview for children: Agreement on diagnosis comparing child and parent interviews , 1982, Journal of abnormal child psychology.

[13]  M. Lewis,et al.  Organizing the community to target poor Latino children with asthma. , 1996, The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma.

[14]  S. Thurber,et al.  Evaluation of the asthma camp experience for children. , 1993, The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma.

[15]  P. Lehrer,et al.  Asthma and emotion: a review. , 1993, The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma.

[16]  M. A. Lewis,et al.  The termination of a randomized clinical trial for poor Hispanic children. , 1994, Archives of pediatrics & adolescent medicine.

[17]  G. Kieckhefer,et al.  Assessment of Children's Health Status: Field Test of New Approaches , 1989, Medical care.

[18]  J. R. Landis,et al.  The measurement of observer agreement for categorical data. , 1977, Biometrics.

[19]  G. Guyatt,et al.  Children and adult perceptions of childhood asthma. , 1997, Pediatrics.

[20]  A. Weston,et al.  Physical activity of asthmatic and nonasthmatic children. , 1989, The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma.

[21]  G. Guyatt,et al.  Evaluation of the burden of illness for pediatric asthmatic patients and their parents. , 1991, Annals of allergy.

[22]  B. Hsi,et al.  Ventilatory functions of normal children and young adults--Mexican-American, white, and black. I. Spirometry. , 1979, The Journal of pediatrics.

[23]  John L. Hankinson,et al.  Standardization of Spirometry, 1994 Update. American Thoracic Society. , 1995, American journal of respiratory and critical care medicine.

[24]  B Starfield,et al.  Poverty, race, and hospitalization for childhood asthma. , 1988, American journal of public health.

[25]  Screening a state middle school for asthma using the free running asthma screening test. , 1993, Archives of disease in childhood.

[26]  A. Costello,et al.  Age differences in the reliability of the psychiatric interview of the child. , 1985, Child development.

[27]  M M Weissman,et al.  Children's Symptom and Social Functioning Self-Report Scales Comparison of Mothers' and Children's Reports , 1980, The Journal of nervous and mental disease.

[28]  D K Wagener,et al.  Changing patterns of asthma mortality. Identifying target populations at high risk. , 1990, JAMA.

[29]  P. Gergen,et al.  Reported asthma among Puerto Rican, Mexican-American, and Cuban children, 1982 through 1984. , 1993, American journal of public health.

[30]  A. Butz,et al.  Anxiety in children with asthma. , 1993, The Journal of asthma : official journal of the Association for the Care of Asthma.

[31]  T. Aldrich,et al.  An evaluation of the accuracy of Assess and MiniWright peak flowmeters. , 1991, Chest.

[32]  G. Fritz,et al.  Symptom perception in pediatric asthma: relationship to functional morbidity and psychological factors. , 1996, Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

[33]  G. Polgar,et al.  Pulmonary Function Testing in Children: Techniques and Standards , 1977 .

[34]  T. Prihoda,et al.  Hispanic children with asthma: morbidity. , 1993, Pediatrics.

[35]  William J. Friedman About Time : Inventing the Fourth Dimension , 1990 .