User:Ithaker/sandbox

Recommended diagnostic interviews for PTSD
Note: L = Less than adequate; A = Adequate; G = Good; E = Excellent; U = Unavailable; NA = Not applicable

Table 1. Assessment Planning after Traumatic Bereavement: Focus on Bereavement, Trauma, and Developmental Impact
Key: BPC = Brief Problem Checklist; CAPS-CA-5 = Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale FOR DSM-5 Child/Adolescent Version; C-SSRS= Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale; CSI-24 = Children's Somatization Inventory; Dx = Clinical diagnosis; MFQ = Mood and Feelings Questionnaire; PCBD = Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder: PTSD = posttraumatic stress disorder; RI-5-BF = UCLA PTSD Reaction Index-DSM-5 Version-Brief Form; RI-5 = UCLA PTSD Reaction Index-DSM-5 Version; PCBD Checklist = Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder Checklist; SDQ = Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire

1A detailed version of the 12-step evidence-based procedure applied to bereaved children and adolescents can be found at Wikiversity (citation/address)

Table 2. Twelve Steps in Implementing Evidence-Based Assessment with Bereaved Youth seen in a Mental Health Clinic
Note. Steps are lettered instead of numbered to emphasize that there is no strict order. Further, considering patient preferences and cultural factors should ideally infuse the entire assessment and treatment process. It is thus an “X”-factor for enhancing rapport and engagement, and hence labeled as “Step X” even though it is listed midway through the procedure.

Key: CAPS-CA-5 = PCBD = Persistent Complex Bereavement Disorder; PTSD = post-traumatic stress disorder; DAWBA = Development and Well-Being Assessment

Table 3. Clinical Vignette from Page 37
Note: For depression, T-scores and diagnostic likelihood ratios are derived from the Anxious/Depressed subscale for Depression and the broadband Internalizing Subscale for Anxiety based recommendations (Cohen & Thakur, 2019; Van Meter et al., 2014). Given that base rates of gender disorders vary based on subtype, we did not calculate different prevalence estimates for females compared to the general population, consistent with past research (Van Meter et al., 2014). DLRs for the vignette were taken from Cohen and Thakur (2019) for depression and Van Meter et al. (2014) for anxiety. DLRs vary between studies and selection of DLRs should be based on population for the assessment (e.g., community vs. outpatient clinic) as well as one’s conceptualization of depression. These methodological factors could also have an impact on selection of pre-test prevalence. For more explanation on the calculation of posterior probability, please see the clinical vignette above, and consult Straus et al. (2011) for more details on how to compute posterior probability.