Development and preliminary validation of the Sleep Screening for Children and Adolescents with Complex Chronic Conditions (SCAC)

Author:

Kubek Larissa Alice12ORCID,Claus Benedikt13,Rostasy Kevin4,Bertolini Annikki4,Schimmel Mareike5,Frühwald Michael C.6,Classen Georg7,Zernikow Boris123,Wager Julia123

Affiliation:

1. PedScience Research Institute Datteln Germany

2. Department of Children's Pain Therapy and Paediatric Palliative Care, Faculty of Health, School of Medicine Witten/Herdecke University Witten Germany

3. Paediatric Palliative Care Centre Children's and Adolescents' Hospital Datteln Germany

4. Department of Pediatric Neurology, Children's and Adolescents' Hospital Datteln Witten/Herdecke University Witten Germany

5. Pediatric Neurology University Medical Center Augsburg Augsburg Germany

6. Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine University Medical Center Augsburg Augsburg Germany

7. Department of Pediatric Neurology Bethel Evangelical Hospital Bielefeld Germany

Abstract

SummaryChildren and adolescents with complex chronic conditions, including those with life‐threatening or life‐limiting conditions, are a heterogeneous population. Many individuals exhibit sleep abnormalities that are measurable by proxy questionnaires. No suitable instrument to assess the wide range of different complex chronic conditions is currently available. The aim of the present study was to develop a screening tool—the Sleep Screening for Children and Adolescents with Complex Chronic Conditions—to effectively obtain sleep behaviour information in this population. Following a mixed‐method design, potential items for the Sleep Screening for Children and Adolescents with Complex Chronic Conditions questionnaire were defined through literature research and expert meetings. In a pre‐test with N = 60 family and professional caregivers, the items' relevance and comprehensibility as well as the instrument's overall design were assessed. For the main test, N = 315 participants were recruited in three tertiary paediatric hospitals. A principal components analysis detected the questionnaire's scales. Item analysis focused on mean values, range, difficulty and discriminatory power. Convergent validation of the Sleep Screening for Children and Adolescents with Complex Chronic Conditions was assessed via correlations between scale items. Most patients had neurological or neuromuscular diseases. Four scales (“Falling and staying asleep”, “Sleep‐associated respiration and arousal”, “Daytime sleepiness” and “Sleep‐associated movements”) emerged. The item analysis showed satisfactory discriminative power. In the preliminary validation, all scales correlated positively with a child's care level and with various sleep circumstances items. Three scales additionally correlated with the number of complex chronic condition diagnoses. This newly developed questionnaire can provide clinicians with first indications of possible sleep problems in a growing paediatric population.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Behavioral Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience,General Medicine

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