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BACKGROUND: Visual analogue scales (VAS) are used to assess the strength of perceptions of both children and adults in many clinical and research settings. Although the VAS has been shown by some authors to be reliable for use by children aged 5 years and older, others have proposed that young children, generally or =5.6 years), combined with estimated IQ (> or =100), was the best predictor of a child's ability to use a VAS (88% accuracy). CONCLUSION: The majority of kindergarten children in our study could not complete a VAS accurately. Cognitive ability, combined with chronological age, was the best predictor of a child's accurate use of a VAS, as determined by logistic regression. Paediatric researchers may need to consider alternative rating scales to measure perceptions in children under 7 years of age.
Shields et al. (Thu,) studied this question.