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Developing and Testing a Quality of Life Index for Children with Disabilities in South Africa.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Developing and Testing a Quality of Life Index for Children with Disabilities in South Africa./
作者:
Moodley, Jacqueline.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2021,
面頁冊數:
246 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International83-03B.
標題:
Child development. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=28701023
ISBN:
9798544209362
Developing and Testing a Quality of Life Index for Children with Disabilities in South Africa.
Moodley, Jacqueline.
Developing and Testing a Quality of Life Index for Children with Disabilities in South Africa.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2021 - 246 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 83-03, Section: B.
Thesis (D.Litt. et Phil.)--University of Johannesburg (South Africa), 2021.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
There is a paucity of investigations into the multidimensional quality of life (QoL) of children with disabilities in both developed and developing countries. The reasons for a lack of these investigations include the fact that QoL and disability are both dynamic and contested constructs, which affect how QoL is measured. The prevailing situation inadvertently contributes to the perpetuation of a cycle of exclusion of children with disabilities and compromises public efforts to promote their needs and rights. Not only is it a constitutional and legislative imperative in South Africa to focus on children with disabilities, but it is also in line with global standards to promote children's rights and the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with their focus on leaving no one behind. Despite these commitments, there is no instrument currently available that is suitable for the multidimensional measurement of the QoL of children with disabilities in South Africa. Such an instrument could go a long way in determining how they fare relative to children without disabilities, including the factors that are associated with improving their wellbeing. This study fills this important knowledge gap.Informed by Sen's Capabilities Approach (CA) and notions of Ubuntu, this study employed a quantitative research design to first, construct QoL indices for children (including those with disabilities) in South Africa. Categorical Principal Component Analysis (CATPCA) and the method of Nicoletti et al. (2000) were used to construct and weight a composite QoL index using the 2011 and 2016 South African General Household Surveys published by Statistics South Africa. Second, comparisons in the QoL of children with and without disabilities were drawn to identify the disparities between these groups of children. A third aim was to compare QoL based on heterogeneity in child disability. Finally, the parental and social/environmental factors associated with improved QoL of children with disabilities were explored. The analysis in this study was conducted at two points in time to ascertain the robustness of the new index as well as to detect any changes in child QoL.Key QoL dimensions that consistently formed part of the constructed index included both household characteristics and individual level characteristics of the child. These dimensions included access to basic services, access to food, income, assets, education, and care resources available to children. The findings of the research demonstrated that in 2011, children with disabilities (ܺx̄=79.9, SD=10.4) experienced a QoL that was significantly lower than that of children without disabilities (ܺx̄=80.6, SD=10.7). This difference, however, was not evident in the 2016 cohort of children, suggesting that the gap in disparities between children with and without disabilities was closing. However, when race and age intersected with disabilities, younger children and Black African children experienced lower QoL levels. Furthermore, children with moderate disabilities attained an average QoL score of approximately 81, which was significantly higher than the average QoL score of approximately 79 attained by children with severe disabilities. Children with difficulties in walking experienced the lowest QoL across 2011 and 2016. Yet, irrespective of the types or severities of disabilities experienced, three sets of resources emerged as most important in improving child wellbeing, namely basic services, income and food access.
ISBN: 9798544209362Subjects--Topical Terms:
515512
Child development.
Developing and Testing a Quality of Life Index for Children with Disabilities in South Africa.
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There is a paucity of investigations into the multidimensional quality of life (QoL) of children with disabilities in both developed and developing countries. The reasons for a lack of these investigations include the fact that QoL and disability are both dynamic and contested constructs, which affect how QoL is measured. The prevailing situation inadvertently contributes to the perpetuation of a cycle of exclusion of children with disabilities and compromises public efforts to promote their needs and rights. Not only is it a constitutional and legislative imperative in South Africa to focus on children with disabilities, but it is also in line with global standards to promote children's rights and the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with their focus on leaving no one behind. Despite these commitments, there is no instrument currently available that is suitable for the multidimensional measurement of the QoL of children with disabilities in South Africa. Such an instrument could go a long way in determining how they fare relative to children without disabilities, including the factors that are associated with improving their wellbeing. This study fills this important knowledge gap.Informed by Sen's Capabilities Approach (CA) and notions of Ubuntu, this study employed a quantitative research design to first, construct QoL indices for children (including those with disabilities) in South Africa. Categorical Principal Component Analysis (CATPCA) and the method of Nicoletti et al. (2000) were used to construct and weight a composite QoL index using the 2011 and 2016 South African General Household Surveys published by Statistics South Africa. Second, comparisons in the QoL of children with and without disabilities were drawn to identify the disparities between these groups of children. A third aim was to compare QoL based on heterogeneity in child disability. Finally, the parental and social/environmental factors associated with improved QoL of children with disabilities were explored. The analysis in this study was conducted at two points in time to ascertain the robustness of the new index as well as to detect any changes in child QoL.Key QoL dimensions that consistently formed part of the constructed index included both household characteristics and individual level characteristics of the child. These dimensions included access to basic services, access to food, income, assets, education, and care resources available to children. The findings of the research demonstrated that in 2011, children with disabilities (ܺx̄=79.9, SD=10.4) experienced a QoL that was significantly lower than that of children without disabilities (ܺx̄=80.6, SD=10.7). This difference, however, was not evident in the 2016 cohort of children, suggesting that the gap in disparities between children with and without disabilities was closing. However, when race and age intersected with disabilities, younger children and Black African children experienced lower QoL levels. Furthermore, children with moderate disabilities attained an average QoL score of approximately 81, which was significantly higher than the average QoL score of approximately 79 attained by children with severe disabilities. Children with difficulties in walking experienced the lowest QoL across 2011 and 2016. Yet, irrespective of the types or severities of disabilities experienced, three sets of resources emerged as most important in improving child wellbeing, namely basic services, income and food access.
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