The study highlights socioeconomic factors to be significant to the stigma and illness uncertainty experiences in SCD. Efforts by healthcare workers to reduce patient illness uncertainty may have additional impact, reducing their stigma.
Background We aim to assess the levels of agreement between parents, as proxies, and Jamaican adolescents living with sickle cell disease (SCD) in the reporting of the adolescent's quality of life. Procedures This cross‐sectional study assessed 102 patient/proxy pairs on quality of life of adolescents with SCD using the PedsQL‐SCD module. The level of agreement among pairs was assessed starting with broad group‐level approaches (the Wilcoxon signed‐rank test augmented by exploring percentage agreement) tapering to individual‐level approaches (intraclass correlation coefficients [ICCs] supplemented with Bland‐Altman plots). Results Most patients (76.5%) had homozygous SS disease (45.1% females; mean age 15.2 ± 1.5 years). Median total pediatric quality of life (PedsQL) scores were 79.1 (adolescent report) and 80.2 (parental report) (P = .60). There were 11.8% underestimation and 12.7% overestimation of overall health‐related quality of life (HRQOL) by parents. The highest perfect agreement existed on the “pain and hurt” domain for both male and female adolescents (85.7% and 84.4%, respectively). Overestimation was highest on the “social communication” domain for both male and female adolescents (19.6% and 34.8%, respectively). Parents exhibited good agreement on total PedsQL scores in male adolescents (ICC = 0.70), but moderate agreement (ICC = 0.43) in female adolescents. Generally, parents underestimated their male child's functioning and overestimated the female child's functioning on the various domains. Conclusions Parents and adolescents exhibit fair agreement in assessment of the adolescent's overall HRQOL but differ on subjective domains. Agreement varies by sex of the affected teen where girls’ HRQOL is generally overestimated by the parental proxy. Interventions to improve parents’ understanding of their children's psychosocial needs are needed.
Objective: To estimate dietary sodium and potassium consumption among Jamaicans and evaluate associations with sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of data from the Jamaica Health and Lifestyle Survey 2016-2017. Participants were non-institutionalized Jamaicans, ≥15 years. Trained staff collected sociodemographic and health data via interviewer administered questionnaires and collected spot urine samples. The Pan American Health Organization Formulae were used to estimate 24-hour urine sodium and potassium excretion. High sodium was defined as ≥2000 mg/day and low potassium as <3510 mg/day (World Health Organization criteria). Associations of these outcomes with sociodemographic and clinical characteristics were explored in sex specific multivariable ANOVA models. Results: Analyses included 1009 participants (368 males, 641 females; mean age 48.5 years). Mean sodium excretion was 3582 mg/day (males 3943 mg/day, females 3245 mg/day, p<0.001). Mean potassium excretion was 2052 mg/day (males 2210 mg/day, females 1904 mg/day, p=0.001). The prevalence of high sodium consumption was 66.6% (males 72.8%, female 60.7%, p<0.001) and low potassium intake was 88.8% (85.1% males, 92.3% females, p<0.001). Among males, sodium consumption was inversely associated with older age and prehypertension, but directly associated with current smoking and obesity. Among females, sodium consumption was inversely associated with hypertension, impaired fasting glucose, low GFR and high physical activity, but was directly associated with obesity. Conclusion: Most Jamaican adults have diets high in sodium and low in potassium. Sodium consumption was directly associated with obesity in both men and women. Population based strategies are therefore required to address these cardiovascular risk factors.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.