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Clinical Commentary

Measuring participation of children with disabilities: Issues and challenges

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Pages 639-648 | Accepted 01 Mar 2007, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Purpose. The aim of this paper is to examine conceptual issues that challenge development of valid and useful measures of children's participation.

Method. Ambiguities in the current definition of participation in the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) are examined along with their implications for developing valid measures for children and youth.

Results. Developers of new measures must address three key issues that will affect the ultimate meaning of participation data obtained from these instruments: uncertain criteria to distinguish activity from participation; lack of consensus on whether measures should address objective or subjective aspects of participation or both; and appropriate choice of respondent when children are the focus. Variations in how the participation construct is operationalized challenge one's ability to develop a coherent body of knowledge about children's participation and the factors that influence it.

Conclusion. Given current variations in how participation is being defined, both developers and users of measures of participation need to be explicit about the definition of participation that a particular measure represents and the inferences that can be drawn from the scores.

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