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Original Research

The Dimensions of Mastery Questionnaire in School-Aged Children with Congenital Hemiplegia: Test–Retest Reproducibility and Parent–Child Concordance

, MHSM, BSc (OT) (Hons), , BOccThy (Hons), , PhD, MEd, BA, BAppSc (OT) & , PhD, MSc (Physio), Pgrad (Biomech), BAppSci (PT), BSc (Anatomy)
Pages 168-184 | Received 14 Dec 2012, Accepted 30 Apr 2013, Published online: 02 Jul 2013
 

ABSTRACT

Aim: To examine internal consistency, test–retest reproducibility, and parent–child concordance of the Dimensions of Mastery Questionnaire 17.0 (DMQ) in school-aged children with congenital hemiplegia. Method: Forty-two children (8.24 ± 2.38 years, Manual Ability Classification System (MACS) I = 23, MACS II = 19) and their parents completed the DMQ, and a subset on two occasions 2–30 days apart (n = 27). Cronbach's alpha (α), intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs), standard error of measurement (SEM), and 95% limits of agreement were calculated. Results: Internal consistency for child self-report was variable (α = 0.57–0.90). Cronbach's alphas for parent proxy report were good (α = 0.69–0.86). Test–retest reproducibility for instrumental aspect (ICC = 0.86) and total motivation (ICC = 0.84) were excellent with subscales ranging from 0.70 to 0.91. The SEM for total motivation was 0.23 points. Parent–child concordance was poor across all scores (ICC = −0.04 to 0.42) with a large SEM (0.50–0.91). Interpretation: The DMQ parent report has good test–retest reproducibility for subscales, instrumental, and total motivation scores in school-aged children with congenital hemiplegia. Parent–child concordance was low highlighting differences in individual and contextual perspectives.

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