Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care

Successful transition to adult care is critical for adolescents with special health care needs (SHCN), but there are no well-validated measures to assess transition readiness. This study evaluated the Transition Readiness Assessment Questionnaire (TRAQ) with a younger population and validated the up...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Moynihan, Melissa Mary
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/43753
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-43753
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-437532018-01-05T17:26:20Z Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care Moynihan, Melissa Mary Successful transition to adult care is critical for adolescents with special health care needs (SHCN), but there are no well-validated measures to assess transition readiness. This study evaluated the Transition Readiness Assessment Questionnaire (TRAQ) with a younger population and validated the updated Am I ON TRAC for Adult Care questionnaire. During routine clinic appointments 200 youth, ages 12-19 years, from four outpatient clinics at BC Children’s Hospital, Vancouver participated in the study. The instruments included a demographics information page, the TRAQ, the ON TRAC questionnaire, and two Psychosocial Maturity Inventory (PMI) subscales. Psychometric properties of the PMI, TRAQ and ON TRAC knowledge items were evaluated using principal components analysis (PCA) with parallel analysis and scree plots. ON TRAC behaviour items were summed as an index to measure consistent patterns of behaviour; theorized cut-off scores for behaviour items were set at minimally accepted frequency of behaviours required for successful transition to adult care. Relationships between participant age, psychosocial maturity and ON TRAC scores were examined. Youth were from the diabetes (36%), cardiology (27%), gastroenterology (27%), and neurology (10%) clinics, and 57.5% were male. The PCA of the TRAQ yielded a markedly different factor structure from the original validation study and consequently could not be compared with the ON TRAC for convergent validity. The PCA of ON TRAC knowledge items identified a 14-item unidimensional scale with a Cronbach’s α=.84. ON TRAC knowledge and behaviour scores increased with age, with a stronger relationship for knowledge (r=.43, p<.01), while psychosocial maturity correlated with both ON TRAC scores, with a stronger association to behaviour (r=.39, p<.01). Psychosocial maturity and age had a weak but significant correlation (r=.16, p<.05) suggesting age is a loose proxy for maturity. Only 27% of 17-year-olds, but 62% 18-year-olds scored above the behaviour cut-off for transition readiness. The ON TRAC questionnaire is a psychometrically sound measure with strong internal consistency, and has potential to be used as a readiness assessment tool in clinical practice. Results of the TRAQ psychometric evaluation raise questions about whether it is a suitable measure to evaluate transition readiness among younger adolescents. Applied Science, Faculty of Nursing, School of Graduate 2012-12-21T18:41:55Z 2012-12-21T18:41:55Z 2012 2013-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/43753 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Successful transition to adult care is critical for adolescents with special health care needs (SHCN), but there are no well-validated measures to assess transition readiness. This study evaluated the Transition Readiness Assessment Questionnaire (TRAQ) with a younger population and validated the updated Am I ON TRAC for Adult Care questionnaire. During routine clinic appointments 200 youth, ages 12-19 years, from four outpatient clinics at BC Children’s Hospital, Vancouver participated in the study. The instruments included a demographics information page, the TRAQ, the ON TRAC questionnaire, and two Psychosocial Maturity Inventory (PMI) subscales. Psychometric properties of the PMI, TRAQ and ON TRAC knowledge items were evaluated using principal components analysis (PCA) with parallel analysis and scree plots. ON TRAC behaviour items were summed as an index to measure consistent patterns of behaviour; theorized cut-off scores for behaviour items were set at minimally accepted frequency of behaviours required for successful transition to adult care. Relationships between participant age, psychosocial maturity and ON TRAC scores were examined. Youth were from the diabetes (36%), cardiology (27%), gastroenterology (27%), and neurology (10%) clinics, and 57.5% were male. The PCA of the TRAQ yielded a markedly different factor structure from the original validation study and consequently could not be compared with the ON TRAC for convergent validity. The PCA of ON TRAC knowledge items identified a 14-item unidimensional scale with a Cronbach’s α=.84. ON TRAC knowledge and behaviour scores increased with age, with a stronger relationship for knowledge (r=.43, p<.01), while psychosocial maturity correlated with both ON TRAC scores, with a stronger association to behaviour (r=.39, p<.01). Psychosocial maturity and age had a weak but significant correlation (r=.16, p<.05) suggesting age is a loose proxy for maturity. Only 27% of 17-year-olds, but 62% 18-year-olds scored above the behaviour cut-off for transition readiness. The ON TRAC questionnaire is a psychometrically sound measure with strong internal consistency, and has potential to be used as a readiness assessment tool in clinical practice. Results of the TRAQ psychometric evaluation raise questions about whether it is a suitable measure to evaluate transition readiness among younger adolescents. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Nursing, School of === Graduate
author Moynihan, Melissa Mary
spellingShingle Moynihan, Melissa Mary
Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care
author_facet Moynihan, Melissa Mary
author_sort Moynihan, Melissa Mary
title Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care
title_short Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care
title_full Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care
title_fullStr Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care
title_full_unstemmed Assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care
title_sort assessing adolescents with special health care needs : readiness to transition from paediatric to adult medical care
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/43753
work_keys_str_mv AT moynihanmelissamary assessingadolescentswithspecialhealthcareneedsreadinesstotransitionfrompaediatrictoadultmedicalcare
_version_ 1718583645151690752