학술논문

Quality of Life of Parents Seeking Mental Health Services for Their Adolescent's Social Anxiety: Psychometric Properties of the Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire-Short Form.
Document Type
Article
Source
Child & Youth Care Forum. Jun2024, Vol. 53 Issue 3, p611-629. 19p.
Subject
*SELF-evaluation
*OUTPATIENT services in hospitals
*MENTAL health
*RESEARCH funding
*QUESTIONNAIRES
*RESEARCH methodology evaluation
*HELP-seeking behavior
*FAMILY relations
*PARENT attitudes
*QUALITY of life
*PSYCHOMETRICS
*RESEARCH methodology
*PSYCHOLOGY of parents
*SOCIAL anxiety
*ADOLESCENCE
MEDICAL care for teenagers
RESEARCH evaluation
Language
ISSN
1053-1890
Abstract
Background: The Quality of Life Enjoyment and Satisfaction Questionnaire Short Form (Q-LES-Q-SF) is a well-established, clinically feasible measure of quality of life concerns when assessing relatively severe clinical populations of adult patients. To what degree might the Q-LES-Q-SF facilitate identifying quality of life concerns among parents of adolescents receiving outpatient services for psychosocial concerns for which parents are often involved in service delivery, such as social anxiety? Objective: We tested the Q-LES-Q-SF in a mixed-clinical/community sample of adolescents receiving a social anxiety evaluation and their parents. Method: We examined 134 adolescents aged 14–15 years old and their parents. Parents completed self-reports on the Q-LES-Q-SF as well as self-reports on several domains relevant to understanding their mental health. Further, parents completed reports about adolescent and family functioning known to contribute to psychosocial impairments linked to adolescent social anxiety. Results: We observed strong internal consistency estimates for the Q-LES-Q-SF. Scores taken from the Q-LES-Q-SF demonstrated significant links with survey measures designed to assess various domains of adolescent, parent, and family psychosocial functioning. Further, scores taken from the Q-LES-Q-SF uniquely related to measures of both adolescent and parent social anxiety. Conclusions: The findings support use of a short, clinically feasible measure (Q-LES-Q-SF) to assess quality of life among parents seeking mental health services for their adolescents. As such, the study informs future work that tests the ability of the Q-LES-Q-SF to screen for or identify parents whose quality of life may impact their involvement in the delivery of anxiety-related services to their adolescent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]