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The Development of a Brief Screening Measure of Emotional Distress in Children

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2001

Gordon Parker
Affiliation:
University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
Cai Yiming
Affiliation:
Institute of Mental Health, Singapore
Michael Rutter
Affiliation:
Institute of Psychiatry at the Maudsley, London, U.K.
Shawn Tan
Affiliation:
Institute of Mental Health, Singapore
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Abstract

We report several studies developing a parent-rated measure of emotional distress for children in Singapore, with the key objectives being to derive a very brief valid measure of global distress. The refined item set comprised behaviourally expressed broad manifestations of emotional distress. Three developmental studies were undertaken, with the first two involving parental ratings on the measure for validation against clinician-rated distress levels, while also testing two rating options for the measure. We established clear comparative advantages to the rating anchors used in the Revised Rutter Scales. High inter-rater agreement was established across parental ratings, with the latter finding supporting objectives for the measure. Paternal scores correlated more strongly than maternal scores with clinician-generated distress scores. Additional properties of the measure were tested in a large community sample of nearly 2000 Singapore schoolchildren in their last 2 years of primary school, allowing prevalence estimates and mean scores to be derived for each item. Here, girls and boys received identical total scores, scores were also independent of the number of children in the family and of ordinal position, and mothers returned higher scores than fathers.

Type
Papers
Copyright
© 2001 Association for Child Psychology and Psychiatry

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