LIFE Leipzig Research Center for Civilization Diseases, Leipzig University, Leipzig, Sachsen, Germany.
Department of Women and Child Health, Hospital for Children and Adolescents and Center for Pediatric Research (CPL), Leipzig University, Leipzig, Sachsen, Germany.
PLoS One. 2020 Apr 9;15(4):e0231462. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0231462. eCollection 2020.
The present study aimed to investigate and compare parent-child agreement in different domains of child health and behavior.
Data were collected between 2011 and 2019 within the framework of the LIFE Child study (Germany). Different subgroups of 10- to 12-year-old children and their parents (n (max) = 692) completed questionnaires on several health behaviors (diet, media use, physical activity, sleep), parameters of health (behavioral strengths and difficulties, psychosomatic complaints), and school grades. Agreement between child and parent reports was evaluated using weighted kappa coefficients. Furthermore, the frequencies of different types of (dis)agreement (parent report > child report, same response, child report > parent report) were assessed and checked for associations with child or parent gender.
Agreement between child and parent reports varied from low to almost perfect, with the greatest levels of agreement for school grades and organized physical activity, and the lowest for dizziness, sleep duration, and the consumption of potatoes. Child gender had no significant effect on parent-child agreement. In contrast, the findings suggest that parent gender had some effect on agreement levels, with higher agreement for certain psychosomatic complaints when parent reports were completed by the mother, and higher agreement for white bread consumption if they were completed by the father. For some of the questionnaire items (especially those relating to behavioral difficulties and psychosomatic complaints, but also to the consumption of individual food products and mobile phone use), the type of (dis)agreement differed depending on child or parent gender.
The findings suggest that the perceptions and reporting strategies of children and their parents can diverge considerably, in particular for behavior that is not easily observable or measurable.
本研究旨在调查和比较儿童健康和行为不同领域的亲子一致性。
数据收集于 2011 年至 2019 年期间,在德国 LIFE Child 研究框架内进行。10 至 12 岁儿童及其父母的不同亚组(n(最大值)=692)完成了关于多个健康行为(饮食、媒体使用、体育活动、睡眠)、健康参数(行为优势和困难、身心抱怨)和学校成绩的问卷。使用加权 kappa 系数评估儿童和父母报告之间的一致性。此外,评估了不同类型(不一致)的频率(父母报告>儿童报告、相同的反应、儿童报告>父母报告),并检查其与儿童或父母性别之间的关联。
儿童和父母报告之间的一致性从低到几乎完美,学校成绩和有组织的体育活动的一致性最高,头晕、睡眠时间和土豆消耗的一致性最低。儿童性别对亲子一致性没有显著影响。相比之下,研究结果表明,父母性别对一致性水平有一定影响,当母亲完成某些身心抱怨的父母报告时,一致性较高,而当父亲完成时,白面包消费的一致性较高。对于某些问卷项目(特别是与行为困难和身心抱怨有关的项目,但也与个别食品消费和手机使用有关的项目),不一致的类型取决于儿童或父母的性别。
研究结果表明,儿童及其父母的看法和报告策略可能存在很大差异,特别是对于不易观察或测量的行为。