Tuyển tập báo cáo các nghiên cứu khoa học quốc tế ngành y học dành cho các bạn tham khảo đề tài: Reliability and validity of the Spanish version of the Child Health and Illness Profile (CHIP) ChildEdition, Parent Report Form (CHIP-CE/PRF) | Estrada et al. Health and Quality of Life Outcomes 2010 8 78 http content 8 1 78 HEALTH AND QUALITY of life outcomes RESEARCH Open Access Reliability and validity of the Spanish version of the Child Health and Illness Profile CHIP Child- Edition Parent Report Form CHIP-CE PRF Maria-Dolors Estrada Luis Rajmil Vicky Serra-Sutton Cristian Tebé Jordi Alonso Michael Herdman Anne W Riley4 Christopher B Forrest5 Barbara Starfield4 Abstract Background The objectives of the study were to assess the reliability and the content construct and convergent validity of the Spanish version of the CHIP-CE PRF to analyze parent-child agreement and compare the results with those of the original . version. Methods Parents from a representative sample of children aged 6-12 years were selected from 9 primary schools in Barcelona. Test-retest reliability was assessed in a convenience subsample of parents from 2 schools. Parents completed the Spanish version of the CHIP-CE PRF. The Achenbach Child Behavioural Checklist CBCL was administered to a convenience subsample. Results The overall response rate was 67 n 871 . There was no floor effect. A ceiling effect was found in 4 subdomains. Reliability was acceptable at the domain level internal consistency test-retest intraclass correlation coefficients . Younger girls had better scores on Satisfaction and Achievement than older girls. Comfort domain score was lower worse in children with a probable mental health problem with high effect size ES . The level of parent-child agreement was low . Conclusions The results of this study suggest that the parent version of the Spanish CHIP-CE has acceptable psychometric properties although further research is needed to check reliability at sub-domain level. The CHIP-CE parent report form provides a comprehensive psychometrically sound measure of health for Spanish children 6 to 12 years old. It can be a complementary .