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PedMIDAS : Échelle d'évaluation de l'incapacité due à la migraine pédiatrique×Questionnaire sur la santé de l'enfant (CHQ)×Questionnaire sur la qualité de vie de l'enfant asthmatique (PAQLQ)×
DomainePédiatriePédiatriePédiatrie
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine200119961996
Auteur d'origineAmy D. HersheyJohn M. LandgrafE. F. Juniper
TypeParent-report and/or child self-report of missed activitiesParent report (primary) and child self-report versions availableChild self-report; parent version available
Source fondatriceHershey, A. D., Powers, S. W., Vockell, A. L., LeCates, S., & Ellinwood, E. H. (2001). PedMIDAS: Development of a questionnaire to assess disabilities in migrainous children. Headache, 41(6), 556-563. DOI ↗Landgraf, J. M., Abetz, L., & Ware, J. E. (1996). The CHQ User's Manual. HealthAct. ISBN: 978-0965475303Juniper, E. F., Guyatt, G. H., Feeny, D. H., Ferrie, P. J., Griffith, L. E., & Townsend, M. (1996). Measuring quality of life in children with asthma. Quality of Life Research, 5(1), 35-46. DOI ↗
AliasPediatric Migraine Disability Assessment, MIDAS, MIDAS PediatricCHQ-50, CHQ-28, CHQ-PF28, CHQ-CF87PAQLQ-S
Apparentées444
RésuméThe PedMIDAS is a brief 6-item parent-report (with child input for older youth) instrument developed by Hershey et al. in 2001 to quantify migraine-related functional disability in children and adolescents. Rather than measuring pain intensity or headache frequency, the PedMIDAS focuses on the ultimate impact of migraine on daily life: how many days of school, sports/play, and family activities does the child miss or participate in only with significant limitation? This outcome-focused approach makes it particularly useful for assessing the real-world burden of migraine in children and evaluating treatment effectiveness.The Child Health Questionnaire is a generic, parent-reported instrument developed by Landgraf et al. in 1996 to measure health-related quality of life in children aged 5–18 years. Unlike disease-specific measures, the CHQ captures broad domains of physical, emotional, social, and school functioning, making it suitable for diverse pediatric populations with or without chronic conditions. The CHQ-50 is the most widely used parent-report form; shorter (CHQ-28) and comprehensive (CHQ-CF87 child + family) versions are also available.The PAQLQ is a 23-item self-report instrument developed by Juniper et al. in 1996 to measure quality of life in children aged 7–17 years with asthma. It assesses how asthma and its treatment affect daily functioning, emotions, and activity levels. The instrument has become the gold standard for evaluating asthma-specific health-related quality of life in pediatric populations.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: PedMIDAS · CHQ · PAQLQ. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare