Summary: | Abstract Background Life extension by medical interventions and health-related quality of life (HRQOL) are sometimes conflicting aspects of medical care. Long-term ventilation in children with neuromuscular disease is a well-established life-extending procedure and often at the center of this conflict. HRQOL and the mental health of affected children and their families become even more important in respect to emerging therapies in neuromuscular diseases with longer life-expectancy of treated patients and considerable costs of medical treatment. Methods We performed a questionnaire survey in a total of forty-three families of children with neuromuscular disease treated in the University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf and the Children’s Hospital Altona. We evaluated self- and proxy-reported HRQOL and mental health outcomes of affected children and their parents using validated and age-appropriate instruments. Results Compared to normative data, children with neuromuscular diseases and their families experienced a lower HRQOL and mental health. However, there was no additional negative influence on the overall HRQOL by ventilator use. Conclusions As ventilator use was not responsible for the reduction of HRQOL and mental health our data contributes an important aspect to the discussion about life-prolonging procedures, in particular mechanical ventilation, in severly disabled patients.
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