Author:
COSTELLO E. J.,ANGOLD A.,MARCH J.,FAIRBANK J.
Abstract
Background. A new interview measure of life events and
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has
been developed for children and adolescents aged 9 through 17, for use
in both epidemiological and
clinical studies. It includes ‘high magnitude’ events associated
with PTSD as well as other ‘low
magnitude’ events.Method. The interview is designed as a module of the Child
and Adolescent Psychiatric Assessment,
an interviewer-based interview conducted with parent and child separately
by trained lay
interviewers. The module includes: (1) questions about a wide range of
events; (2) a screen for key
PTSD symptoms (painful recall, avoidance, hypervigilance); and (3) a detailed
interview on all
PTSD symptoms, including onset, duration, severity and co-morbidity. A
test–retest reliability
study was conducted with 58 parents and children, who were interviewed
twice by different
interviewers.Results. Intraclass correlations were 0·72 (child) and
0·83 (parent) for high magnitude events, and
0·62 (child) and 0·58 (parent) for low magnitude events.
Kappa coefficients ranged from high for
violence and sexual abuse to low for child reports of serious accidents
and natural disasters. The
reliability of the PTSD screen symptoms was fair to excellent (κ=0·40–0·79),
and reliability of
PTSD symptoms in those who passed the screen was excellent (ICC=0·94–0·99).
Compared with
a general population sample (N=1015), the clinic-referred subjects
and their parents were twice as
likely to report a traumatic event and, depending on the event, up to 25
times as likely to report
symptoms of PTSD.Conclusions. The results support the reliability and discriminant
validity of the measure.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
80 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献