The study aimed to examine and compare the content of the quality of life in short-stature youth questionnaire (QoLISSY) with the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health - Children and Youth (
ICF-
CY).
Items of the QoLISSY questionnaire for children/adolescents and their parents were coded within the framework of the
ICF-
CY. Linkage was performed according to predetermined standards by two health professionals experienced in the conceptual fundaments of the
ICF-
CY.
Within the linking process 58 meaningful concepts were identified from the 55 items out of the QoLISSY parent questionnaire and 55 meaningful concepts from the 50 items of the QoLISSY (children) questionnaire. In total, 57 concepts (parent-questionnaire) and 54 concepts (children-questionnaire) were linked to the different categories of the
ICF-
CY. Twenty-seven categories (parents-version) and 20 categories (child-version) referred to the component body functions, 34 categories (parent-version) and 30 categories (child-version) represented the activity and participation component and in each version 30 categories represented the environmental factors component.
The present study indicates that the
ICF-
CY provides a useful frame of reference to compare and examine the content of HrQoL instruments for short-statured children and adolescents and their parents. The linkage of the QoLISSY instrument within the framework of the
ICF-
CY translates its content into a universal language. Implications for Rehabilitation The linkage of Quality of Life - Questionnaires to the
ICF-
CY provides guidance for clinicians and researchers in the selection of appropriate instruments complying with
ICF categories. Linking the QoLISSY instrument to the
ICF may raise awareness in clinicians and researchers about domains relevant for young people with short-stature from a well-being and functioning perspective. In the linkage exercise, the
ICF serves as a reference matrix which can be used to compare and better understand QoL domains of different instruments. With the linkage, effects of interventions as assessed via QoLISSY can be tied to
ICF categories.