Not exact matches
Checklist of Postpartum Mood
Disorder Symptoms:
Symptoms Obtained through the Empirical Literature
The current edition of the DSM, the DSM - IV, is something like a field guide to mental
disorders: the book pairs each illness with a
checklist of
symptoms, just as a naturalist's guide describes the distinctive physical features of different birds.
The Diagnostic
Checklist for Oppositional Defiant and Conduct
Disorder (DCL - SSV) is rated by a (blinded) clinician and assesses all
symptom criteria for ODD and some of the
symptom criteria of Conduct Disorders according to ICD - 10 and DSM - IV based on parent information in a semi-structured interview.
Elevated
symptom score in the parent rated Symptom Checklist for Oppositional Defiant and Conduct Disorder (FBB - SSV) with Stanine ≥ 7 at pre-ass
symptom score in the parent rated
Symptom Checklist for Oppositional Defiant and Conduct Disorder (FBB - SSV) with Stanine ≥ 7 at pre-ass
Symptom Checklist for Oppositional Defiant and Conduct
Disorder (FBB - SSV) with Stanine ≥ 7 at pre-assessment
The
Symptom Checklist for Oppositional Defiant and Conduct Disorder (FBB - SSV) assesses all symptom criteria for ODD and some of the symptom criteria of Conduct Disorders according to ICD - 10 and DS
Symptom Checklist for Oppositional Defiant and Conduct
Disorder (FBB - SSV) assesses all
symptom criteria for ODD and some of the symptom criteria of Conduct Disorders according to ICD - 10 and DS
symptom criteria for ODD and some of the
symptom criteria of Conduct Disorders according to ICD - 10 and DS
symptom criteria of Conduct Disorders according to ICD - 10 and DSM - IV.
Doubting your fathers» love is not a
symptom of any psychological
disorder, nor is it an item on a mental health
checklist.
Inclusion criteria: cancer prognosis of 6 months or more; major depressive
disorder for ⩾ 1 month not associated with a change of cancer or cancer management; and a score of ⩾ 1.75 on the
Symptom Checklist - 20 (SCL - 20) depression scale (score range 1 — 4, higher score indicating greater levels of depressive
symptoms).
At the 9 - month and 2 - year assessments, caregivers completed the modified Infant Toddler
Symptom Checklist (ITSC)(see Table 1), a validated scale for use in children 7 to 30 months of age.23 Its purpose is to identify infants and toddlers with regulatory
disorders who may be demanding of their caregivers; be unpredictably fussy; or have problems with sleep, feeding, or regulating mood and behavior.
AAI, Adult Attachment Interview; AFFEX, System for Identifying Affect Expression by Holistic Judgement; AIM, Affect Intensity Measure; AMBIANCE, Atypical Maternal Behaviour Instrument for Assessment and Classification; ASCT, Attachment Story Completion Task; BAI, Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BEST, Borderline Evaluation of Severity over Time; BPD, borderline personality
disorder; BPVS - II, British Picture Vocabulary Scale II; CASQ, Children's Attributional Style Questionnaire; CBCL, Child Behaviour
Checklist; CDAS - R, Children's Dysfunctional Attitudes Scale - Revised; CDEQ, Children's Depressive Experiences Questionnaire; CDIB, Child Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines; CGAS, Child Global Assessment Schedule; CRSQ, Children's Response Style Questionnaire; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; DASS, Depression, Anxiety, Stress Scales; DERS, Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale; DIB - R, Revised Diagnostic Interview for Borderlines; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; EA, Emotional Availability Scales; ECRS, Experiences in Close Relationships Scale; EMBU, Swedish acronym for Own Memories Concerning Upbringing; EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; FES, Family Environment Scale; FSS, Family Satisfaction Scale; FTRI, Family Trauma and Resilience Interview; IBQ - R, Infant Behaviour Questionnaire, Revised; IPPA, Inventory of Parent and Peer Attachment; K - SADS, Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School - Age Children; KSADS - E, Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia - Episodic Version; MMD, major depressive
disorder; PACOTIS, Parental Cognitions and Conduct Toward the Infant Scale; PPQ, Perceived Parenting Quality Questionnaire; PD, personality
disorder; PPVT - III, Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Third Edition; PSI - SF, Parenting Stress Index Short Form; RSSC, Reassurance - Seeking Scale for Children; SCID - II, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM - IV; SCL -90-R,
Symptom Checklist 90 Revised; SCQ, Social Communication Questionnaire; SEQ, Children's Self - Esteem Questionnaire; SIDP - IV, Structured Interview for DSM - IV Personality; SPPA, Self - Perception Profile for Adolescents; SSAGA, Semi-Structured Assessment for the Genetics of Alcoholism; TCI, Temperament and Character Inventory; YCS, Youth Chronic Stress Interview; YSR, Youth Self - Report.
Contrary to the meta - analyses of Crits - Christoph5 andAnderson and Lambert, 7 studies of IPT werenot included (eg, Elkin et al30 and Wilfleyet al31), because the relation of IPT to STPPis controversial, and empirical results suggest that IPT is very close toCBT.9 Thus, this review includes only studiesfor which there is a general agreement that they represent models of STPP.As it is questionable to aggregate the results of very different outcome measuresthat refer to different areas of psychological functioning, we assessed theefficacy of STPP separately for target
symptoms, general psychiatric
symptoms (ie, comorbid
symptoms), and social functioning.32 Thisprocedure is analogous to the meta - analysis of Crits - Christoph.5 Asoutcome measures of target problems, we included patient ratings of targetproblems and measures referring to the
symptoms that are specific to the patientgroup under study, eg, measures of anxiety for studies investigating treatmentsof anxiety
disorders.33 For the efficacy ofSTPP in general psychiatric
symptoms, broad measures of psychiatric symptomssuch as the
Symptom Checklist - 90 and specific measures that do not refer specificallyto the
disorder under study were included; eg, the Beck Depression Inventoryapplied in patients with personality
disorders.34, 35 Forthe assessment of social functioning, the Social Adjustment Scale and similarmeasures were included.36
The aim of this study was to determine the impact of co-morbid depression on recovery from personality
disorders after schema group therapy, measured by a
symptom checklist (SCL - 90) and the Young Schema Questionnaire (YSQ).
Most professionals only have a
symptom checklist and the Randolph attachment
disorder checklist, a Likert scale that measures
symptoms.
ADHD - specific measures are those that specifically assess the core
symptoms of the
disorder, whereas broad - band
checklists measure a variety of child behavior problems.
The
Checklist was developed to describe the
symptoms that therapists had observed when treating children with attachment
disorder.
Measures utilized were Children's Depression Inventory (CDI), the Trauma
Symptom Checklist for Children (TSCC), the Children and Parenting Strategies, Beck Depression Inventory II (BDBI — II), the Child Behavior
Checklist (CBCL), the Kiddie - Sads Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder Interview (K - SADS PTSD), and the Alabama Parenting Questionnaire — Self Report (APQ).
Abstract: Objective: Purpose was to evaluate factor structure,
symptom clusters and psychometric properties of the German adaptation of the Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder Checklist — Civilian Version (PCL - C) in 1594 breast and prostate cancer survivors.
Objective: Purpose was to evaluate factor structure,
symptom clusters and psychometric properties of the German adaptation of the Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder Checklist — Civilian Version (PCL - C) in 1594 breast and prostate cancer survivors.
The CSI - 24 differs from the 8 - item somatic complaints scale of the Child Behavior
Checklist (Achenbach, 1991) in that it includes a broad range of
symptoms that represent the criteria for various somatoform
disorders, as well as
symptoms representing the criteria for functional somatic syndromes such as irritable bowel syndrome, fibromyalgia, and chronic fatigue syndrome.