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. 2016 Aug;32(4):258-66.
doi: 10.1177/1059840515615401. Epub 2015 Nov 15.

Quality of Life and School Absenteeism in Children With Chronic Illness

Affiliations

Quality of Life and School Absenteeism in Children With Chronic Illness

Natacha D Emerson et al. J Sch Nurs. 2016 Aug.

Abstract

Objective: Children and adolescents with a chronic illness (CI) tend to demonstrate diminished physical and social functioning, which contribute to school attendance issues. We investigated the role of social and physical functioning in reducing school absenteeism in children participating in Mastering Each New Direction (MEND), a family-based psychosocial intervention for youths with CI.

Methods: Forty-eight children and adolescents with a CI (70.8% female, M age = 14.922, SD = 2.143) and their parent(s) completed a health-related quality of life (HRQOL) measure pre- and postintervention. Using multiple mediation, we examined whether parent- and child-rated physical and social HRQOL mediated the relationship between school attendance before and after MEND. Once the mediational model was not supported, we investigated whether HRQOL moderated the relationship between missed school days pre- and postintervention.

Results: Neither physical nor social functioning mediated or moderated the relationship between missed school days pre- and postintervention. Instead, higher parent-rated physical functioning directly predicted decreased number of missed school days, while lower parent-rated social and child-rated physical functioning predicted increased missed school days.

Conclusions: Parent-perceived HRQOL may have a direct effect on health-related behaviors such as school attendance. Future research should determine whether gains in parent-rated QOL are maintained in the long term and whether these continue to impact markers of functional well-being.

Keywords: adolescents; children; chronic illness; quality of life; school attendance.

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Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of Conflicting Interests

The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Multiple mediation model predicting missed school days at Time 2 from missed school days at Time 1 via the indirect effect of child-rated and parent-rated physical and social quality of life (n = 35). *p < .05.**p < .01.

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