Parental / personal concern, counseling, and positive Pediatric
Symptom Checklist scores were examined to determine their efficacy as screening methods.
Six percent of the population had positive Pediatric
Symptom Checklist scores.
The goals were to examine factors related to positive Pediatric
Symptom Checklist scores in an urban practice and to examine the relative contribution of parental / personal concern about emotional and behavioral problems to mental health problem identification.
The researchers noted that those who dropped out had slightly higher trauma
symptom checklist scores than those who completed the study.
A positive Pediatric
Symptom Checklist score with or without parental / personal concern identified 3.8 % of the population; parental / personal concern with or without a positive Pediatric
Symptom Checklist score identified 4.5 %.
Not exact matches
Most injured athletes recovered within the normal timelines established by the Graded
Symptom Checklist, Standardized Assessment of Concussion and Balance Error
Scoring System.
All athletes received face - to - face baseline examination
scores, including a
symptom severity
checklist, Standardized Assessment of Concussion, King - Devick test, and modified Balance Error
Scoring System.
Rimland and Meyer noted as long ago as 1967, that children with the highest
scores on Rimland's E-2 Diagnostic
Checklist also showed many gastrointestinal
symptoms.
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
Included studies used several tools for measuring the severity of depressive
symptoms, namely the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM - D), 21 22 30 34 35 Patient Health Questionnaire - 9 (PHQ - 9), 24 36 Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), 23 26 28 Hopkins
Symptom Checklist - 20 (HSCL - 20), 37 38 Montgomery - Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), 18 25 27 Beck Depression Inventory - Fast Screen (BDI - FS) 39 and Center of Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES - D).40 These tools have different
score ranges (HAM - D = 0 — 53, PHQ - 9 = 0 — 27, GDS = 0 — 15, HSCL - 20 = 0 — 4, MADRS = 0 — 60, BDI - FS = 0 — 21 and CES - D = 0 — 60), with higher
scores in all tools representing increasing severity of depressive
symptoms.
Categorical outcomes for depression (50 % decrease in depression
scores on
symptom checklist and major depression by structured clinical interview for DSM - IV) since baseline assessment at three and six month blinded outcome assessments in patients receiving usual care (n = 196), feedback only (n = 221), and care management (n = 196)
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).
The mother's initial diagnosis was established by clinical interview and confirmed using a
symptom checklist based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM - IV).13 The severity of depressive
symptoms was estimated using the HRSD.15, 16 Maternal remission was defined as an HRSD
score of 7 or less, and response was defined as a 50 % or greater reduction of the baseline HRSD
score.
Main Outcome Measures Child diagnoses based on the Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia; child
symptoms based on the Child Behavior
Checklist; child functioning based on the Child Global Assessment Scale in mothers whose depression with treatment remitted with a
score of 7 or lower or whose depression did not remit with a
score higher than 7 on the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression.
Participants Data from the Nord - Trøndelag Health Study 1995 — 1997 (HUNT) gave information on anxiety and depression
symptoms as self - reported by 7497 school - attending adolescents (Hopkins Symptoms Checklist — SCL - 5 score) and their parents (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale
symptoms as self - reported by 7497 school - attending adolescents (Hopkins
Symptoms Checklist — SCL - 5 score) and their parents (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale
Symptoms Checklist — SCL - 5
score) and their parents (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale
score).
The parent - reported and child - reported Brief Problem
Checklist (BPC) were administered every 3 months during the first 18 months of the trial, which rates items from 0 (not true) to 2 (very true) with higher
scores indicating greater
symptom burden.
† PSC = Pediatric
Symptom Checklist (lower PSC
scores indicate better functioning); SD = standard deviation.
An analysis was conducted on the pre - and post-
Symptom Checklist scores, measuring the child's improvement on six
symptom categories (behavior, emotion, cognition, relationships, physical, and moral / spiritual).
Symptom reduction was determined by comparing
scores on the 50 - item parent reported
Symptom Checklist pre - and post-therapy.
Primary outcomes were the Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale (PDS) 25,26 for PTSD
symptoms and the
Symptom Checklist Depression Scale (SCL - 20) for depressive
symptoms.27 The PDS (17 items) assesses severity of PTSD
symptoms over the prior 4 weeks with high internal consistency and test - retest reliability26;
scores are summed and range from 0 to 51;
scores of 10 or less are mild; 11 to 20, moderate; 21 to 35, moderate to severe; and at least 36, severe.
Symptom Checklist -90-R: Administration,
Scoring, and Procedures Manual, 3rd Edn.
Symptom checklist -90-revised
scores in adult children exposed to alienating behaviors: an italian sample.
The Brief Problem
Checklist (BPC), 25 administered by telephone, is a 12 - item measure of internalizing (6 items;
scores can range from 0 to 12), externalizing (6 items;
score range, 0 - 12), and total problems (12 items;
score range, 0 - 24), developed through application of item response theory and factor analysis to data from the Youth Self - Report and the Child Behavior
Checklist (2 very widely used youth
symptom measures).