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236 Chapter 11 their child´s treatment. There was a statistically significant correlation between both scales (TSQM-convenience and TSQM-satisfaction) and the MARS-5 score (r s 0.342, P = .000 and r s 0.258, P = .006 respectively)(Table 3). No statistically significant differences were found for the TSQM domain scores between parents and children (Supplemental file 2). TABLE 2. Parental questionnaires (BMQ, B-IPQ, TSQM, SIMS) compared between adherent and nonadherent children. Complete data Total scores Adherent (n=43) Nonadherent (n=69) P -value a BMQ-Necessity (n=111) 14 (11-18) 14 (10-19) 15 (11-18) .534 BMQ-Concerns (n=113) 12 (9.5-16) 11 (9-14) 13 (10-16) .042 BMQ-Harm (n=114) 9 (7.75-11) 7 (8-10) 9 (8-11) .250 BMQ-Overuse (n=114) 10 (8-12) 9 (8-11) 10 (8-12) .246 BMQ-differential (n=110) 2 (0-5) 2 (1-5) 2 (0-4.75) .462 B-IPQ1 consequences (n=114) 7 (5-8) 7 (5-8) 8 (6-8) .376 B-IPQ2 timeline (n=115) 7 (5-8) 6 (5-8) 7 (5-8) .721 B-IPQ3 personal control (n=115) 5 (3.5-7) 5 (3-7) 5.5 (3.25-7) .500 B-IPQ4 treatment control (n=115) 4 (2-6) 3 (2-5) 4 (3-6) .042 B-IPQ5 identity (n=115) 7 (5-8) 6 (5-8) 7 (5-7) .378 B-IPQ6 concerns (n=114) 7 (5-8) 7 (5-8) 7 (5-8) .346 B-IPQ7 comprehensibility (n=114) 3 (2-5) 3 (1-5) 3 (2-5.5) .556 B-IPQ8 emotions (n=114) 7 (5-8) 6 (5-7) 7 (5.5-9) .011 TSQM-effectiveness (n=114) 48 (37-62) 52 (24-71) 48 (38-57) .778 TSQM-side effects (n=19) 54 (39-68) 63 (36-84) 54 (39-64) .736 TSQM-convenience (n=114) 71 (52-86) 86 (67-86) 67 (52-85) .001 TSQM-satisfaction (n=114) 57 (43-71)) 67 (52-71) 52 (43-67) .019 SIMS total (n=107) 12 (8-15) 12 (8-14.75) 12 (8.5-15) .753 a Mann-Whitney U test comparing adherent and nonadherent participants. Bold values indicate significant results ( P < .05). SIMS Satisfaction with information about medication was assessed using the SIMS (Table 2). The total SIMS score was similar for adherent and nonadherent children (Table 2). No statistically significant correlation was found between the total SIMS score and the MARS-5 score when applying Spearman’s rank correlation test (Table 3). The SIMS score differed significantly between parents and children; children reported a lower satisfaction with information about treatment compared to their parents (Supplemental file 2).

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