Identifying Children’s Needs When Parents Access Drug Treatment: The Utility of a Brief Screening Measure: Stefan M. Gruenert, Samantha S. Ratnam and Menka Tsantefski

Author(s):  
Maggie H Bromberg ◽  
Rocio de la Vega ◽  
Emily F Law ◽  
Chuan Zhou ◽  
Tonya M Palermo

Abstract Objective Insomnia is a highly prevalent sleep disorder that is particularly common among adolescents with health conditions. We aimed to develop and validate a brief screening measure of insomnia in adolescents that can be used across clinical and community samples. We hypothesized that we would identify evidence supporting reliability, convergent/discriminant validity, and that we would determine preliminary clinical cutoff scores. Methods A team of experts in behavioral sleep medicine developed a 13-item brief screening measure of insomnia in adolescents (Adolescent Insomnia Questionnaire [AIQ]). We evaluated the psychometric properties of the AIQ in a sample of 315 youth (11–18 years old, Mean = 14.90, SD = 2.02; 64% female) who had chronic pain (n = 37), headache (n = 170), insomnia diagnosed by a sleep specialist (n = 22), or were otherwise healthy (n = 86). Results Using Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analysis, we identified three subscales consistent with major diagnostic criteria of insomnia. As expected, the measure showed strong reliability through high internal consistency (α =.91). We also found strong convergent validity through expected positive relationships between the AIQ and self-report measures of sleep disturbance, and divergent validity via weak relationships with parent-report of snoring. Results of receiver operating characteristic (ROC) identified a clinical cutoff score that may assist in clinical decision making. Conclusions We found that the AIQ has sound psychometric properties in a large heterogeneous sample of treatment-seeking youth and youth from the community. The AIQ can quickly screen adolescent insomnia and could address an important clinical need in identifying youth in need of insomnia treatment in pediatric practice settings.


2016 ◽  
Vol 36 ◽  
pp. 345-357 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tricia A. Zucker ◽  
Jeffrey M. Williams ◽  
Elizabeth R. Bell ◽  
Michael A. Assel ◽  
Susan H. Landry ◽  
...  

1985 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 843-846 ◽  
Author(s):  
James P. McLennan

A 10-item Helping Beliefs Inventory was constructed for use as a brief screening measure for applicants for nonprofessional training programs in basic counseling skills. Scores correlated significantly with measures of Authoritarianism, Flexibility, and Psychological Mindedness. Test-retest reliability of .74 was adequate ( n = 43). The inventory discriminated between 30 experienced counselors and 230 noncounselors and between counseling trainees of high and low skill.


2001 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 221-225 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gordon Parker ◽  
Cai Yiming ◽  
Shawn Tan ◽  
Michael Rutter

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