Sarah Maghraoui
Uncovering differences between parent and child completed Pediatric Symptom Checklists in Botswana
Abstract
Background
The 35-item Pediatric Symptom Checklist was designed to identify psychosocial dysfunction in children. Parent-report (PSC) and youth-report (Y-PSC) versions are widely used in the U.S., but their psychometric equivalence has not been well-established. To be used in combination, it is important that these forms function the same way regardless of the reporter. This study compares the construct validity and psychometric properties of the PSC and Y-PSC among children affected by HIV in Botswana.
Methods
Children ages 7-17 years (n=1033) and their parents (n=1183) completed the PSC/Y-PSC in Gaborone, Francistown, and Maun, Botswana. Exploratory and confirmatory item-factor models were performed using multidimensional Item Response Theory with expectation-maximization estimation. Model fit was assessed using CFI, RMSEA, and SRMR.
Results
All methods revealed clear differences between forms, obviating fine-grained measurement invariance analyses. The optimal model for the PSC was a 2-factor, and a 1-factor model was best for the Y-PSC. The 1-factor Y-PSC model had acceptable fit (CFI=0.974, RMSEA=0.027, SRMR=0.043). The 2-factor model for the PSC was tested using a bifactor configuration to retain an overall score. This model was confirmed (CFI=0.967, RMSEA=0.033, SRMR=0.049). The correlation between the sum score and bifactor score was 0.83 (compared to 0.93 for Y-PSC).
Conclusions
Clear violations of measurement invariance across forms suggest that scores from the PSC and Y-PSC should be interpreted differently. Multidimensionality should be accounted for when using the PSC in Botswana and potentially in other non-US settings.
Keywords
Factor structure, HIV, Botswana, Pediatric Symptom Checklist, screening tools, psychosocial difficultiesCommenting is now closed.
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