Clinical utility of a brief diagnostic test for posttraumatic stress disorder
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
This study examines the psychometric properties and clinical utility of a brief diagnostic instrument known as the Self-Rating Scale for PTSD (SRS-PTSD).
METHOD:
The scale was applied to a sample of 136 survivors of a plane crash. We designed SRS-PTSD as an abridged version of the Structured Interview for PTSD (SI-PTSD), which measures the presence and severity of PTSD symptoms from both a current and a lifetime perspective.
RESULTS:
The results indicate that SRS-PTSD and SI-PTSD both show satisfactory internal consistency and interjudge reliability. Furthermore, SRS-PTSD was shown to have sufficient sensitivity and specificity and an adequate likelihood ratio.
CONCLUSIONS:
SRS-PTSD constitutes a good alternative for SI-PTSD, especially for sites with limited clinical resources.
In: Psychosomatic medicine, ISSN 0033-3174 | 60 | 1 | Jan-Feb | 42-47
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