Background
Patient-reported outcome measures place the patient at the centre of his/her care. There are calls to introduce child-reported outcome measures to mental health services. We aimed to (a) develop an age-appropriate patient-reported outcome measure for children’s mental health, and (b) validate this in a primary school and Child and Adolescent Mental Health Service (CAMHS).
Methods
A list of items to measure children’s mental health was proposed (Draft 1) and revised to 14 items following focus group and user consultation (Draft 2). A colourful, cartoon and emoji version was created in consultation with children (Draft 3); a professional cartoon artist created the final ‘My Feelings Form’ (MFF), with usability feedback (Draft 4). The MFF was tested by 317 children aged 4–13 years from one mixed-gender primary school at two time points in 1 day, and 25 children aged 4–13 years from CAMHS. Results were analysed using test–retest reliability and exploratory factor analysis; a receiver operator characteristic curve was constructed.
Results
The CAMHS group scored significantly higher than the school group for the mean total score (23.5 ± 11.3 vs. 16.1 ± 6.2) and for 10 items. Test–retest reliability was acceptable (correlation = 0.74, p < .001). Exploratory factor analysis using 10 informative items identified two factors – emotional factor (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.74) and function factor (Cronbach’s alpha = 0.59). The revised 10-item form has a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.77; a cut-off of 12 has a sensitivity of 80% and specificity of 60%, indicating that it correctly identified 80% of those who were attending CAMHS and gave 60% of the schoolchildren a negative result.
Conclusions
The colourful MFF was co-produced with children, and preliminary data suggest that it is a useful patient-reported outcome measure for children’s mental health.