PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF THE TURKISH VERSION OF COLUMBIA-SUICIDE SEVERITY RATING SCALE AMONG 12-18 YEAR-OLD ADOLESCENTS IN TURKEY Adem Gunes1, M.D.,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Psychometric Properties of a New Measure to Differentiate the Autism Spectrum from Schizoid Personality Disorder Traits Presented by Peter D. Marle, BA.
Advertisements

Is Caregiver Depression Associated with Children’s ADHD Symptoms and Overall Functioning? Randi Scott SUMR Final Presentation August 07, 2008.
The Watson Institute Adolescents with autism spectrum disorders are at greater risk for developing depression when compared to children without an autism.
Health-related quality of life in diabetic patients and controls without diabetes in refugee camps in Gaza strip: a cross-sectional study By: Ashraf Eljedi:
Self perception of stigma in mentally ill patients in Tehran, Iran Helia Ghanean MD. PhD student Umea university, department of psychiatry, Sweden Iran.
The Discrepancy-Depression Association: Gender and Grade Differences Erin N. Stevens, M. C. Lovejoy, & Laura D. Pittman Northern Illinois University Introduction:
Research Review Anxiety Disorder. Study 1 Whiteside and Brown (2008) explore in their research the Spence Children’s Anxiety Scale (SCAS) in a North American.
RESULTS INTRODUCTION Laurentian_University.svgLaurentian_University.svg‎ (SVG file, nominally 500 × 87 pixels, file size: 57 KB) Screening for Developmental.
Presented By: Trish Gann, LPC
RESULTSINTRODUCTION Accuracy of Screening Tests for Autism Spectrum Disorder in Primary Care Settings Marjolaine M. Limbos 1, PhD & David P. Joyce 2, MD,
Disruptive behavior disorders constitute the most prevalent childhood disorders in the United States, with rates in the normal population of up to 10%,
Purpose The present study examined the psychometric properties of the SCARED in order to begin establishing an evidence base for using the SCARED in pediatric.
Interferences between depression and life quality on patients suffering of type 2 diabetes First Author : Madalina Crisan Coauthors: Madalina Salagean.
Table 2: Correlation between age and readiness to change Table 1: T-test relating gender and readiness to change  It is estimated that 25% of children.
Introduction Introduction Alcohol Abuse Characteristics Results and Conclusions Results and Conclusions Analyses comparing primary substance of abuse indicated.
Does Anxiety Vary by Gender and Race During Adolescence? Alyson Cavanaugh, Kelly A. Cheeseman, and Christine McCauley Ohannessian University of Delaware.
Reliability and validity of the adapted Spanish version of the Early Onset Scoliosis-24 questionnaire María del Mar Pozo-Balado, PhD Hiroko Matsumoto PhD.
Reliability and Validity of the Intensive Care Delirium Screening Checklist in Turkish Gulsah Kose, Abdullah Bolu, Leyla Ozdemir, Cengizhan Acikel, Sevgi.
SaVI colloquium 01 November 2013 Investigating TBI prevalence rates in adolescent young offenders in Cape Town Pieter E Erasmus University of Cape Town.
Behavioral problems in adolescents with cardiac disease: an exploratory study in a pediatric cardiology outpatient clinic Dr Maria.
Jessica Carag MS Candidate Public Health Microbiology & Emerging Infectious Diseases Milken Institute School of Public Health The George Washington University.
Copyright © The REACH Institute. All rights reserved. Tools to Know and Love.
Abstract A longitudinal study designed to follow children of alcohol and drug dependent fathers from adolescence into adulthood RISK began in 1993 and.
Writing Methodology Section (Quantitative Research)
Copyright restrictions may apply JAMA Pediatrics Journal Club Slides: Psychiatric Diagnoses and Comorbidities in Young Transgender Women Reisner SL, Biello.
The CRİTERİON-RELATED VALIDITY of the TURKISH VINELAND – II on CLINICAL GROUPS (Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorder Not Otherwise Specified - PDD.
Depression, suicidal ideation and anxiety among medical university students in Central Vietnam Prevalence and possible contributing factors A/Professor.
Is suicide predictable? Paul St John-Smith Short Courses in Psychiatry 15/10/2008.
Comorbid migraine in major depressive disorder suggests
Association of Body Mass Index (BMI) and Depression Severity
Kaitlyn Patterson & Wendy Wolfe
Suicide Prevention Pathway
Nation’s First Collaborative School of Public Health
Borderline personality disorder and personal distress Shalini Choudhary & Komilla Thapa University of Allahabad, Allahabad, India Borderline Personality.
Some epidemiological principles and methods
Sofija Zagarins1, PhD, Garry Welch1, PhD, Jane Garb2, MS
PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF CIS
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Checklist (PCL)
Further Validation of the Personal Growth Initiative Scale – II: Gender Measurement Invariance Harmon, K. A., Shigemoto, Y., Borowa, D., Robitschek, C.,
Increased Aggression Is Associated With Higher Scores on Borderline Personality Features Scale in Bipolar Youth Disclosures: Kirti Saxena, MD : Grant Support.
TEXILA AMERICAN UNIVERSITY
Parental Alcoholism and Adolescent Depression?
Content validity and reproducibility of a low back pain questionnaire in Zimbabwean adolescents: results from a pilot study Tafadzwa Nicole Chikasha Supervisor.
Empathy in Medical Care Jessica Ogle (D
Janet Vogt, Kim Ankers, Barry Isaacs Surrey Place Centre
Introduction Method Results Conclusions
Sociodemographical and Clinical Features Of Treatment-Seeking Patients With Gambling Disorder Ahmet Zihni Soyata1, Funda Süleyman2, Duygu Kınay2, Yasemin.
The role of Emotion Regulation Difficulties and Anxiety Sensitivity
Parenting behaviors predict effortful control and internalizing/externalizing problems among children during the first year of a cancer diagnosis Emily.
***** Boylam Psychiatry Institute, Ankara, Turkey
Kristen Davidson Alyssa Heggen Lauren Lafayette
Pre-Normative Study of the (Turkish Vineland – II)
Questions or comments:
INTERPRETATION OF RESULTS & CONCLUSIONS
Ozcan AYGUN*, PhD Ayse ERGUN*, PhD, RN, Assistant Professor
ANALYSIS OF COMPLETED SUICIDES IN PLEVEN COUNTY FOR A 6 YEAR PERIOD
Monday, 17 September 2018 Should capacity assessment be performed routinely prior to discussing advance care planning with older people? Oleg Kiriaev,
Tools for Screening and Measuring Progress
Bruce Waslick, MD Medical Director UMass / Baystate MCPAP Team
A2 unit 4 Clinical Psychology
Class 4 Experimental Studies: Validity Issues Reliability of Instruments Chapters 7 Spring 2017.
First study published in JOGS.
Instrumentation: Reliability Measuring Caring in Nursing
Validation of the Portuguese DSM-IV-MR-J
ASSESSMENT IN COUNSELLING PREPAIRED BY: DR.MUNA ABDEEN ABDELRAHMAN.
Attitudes of Post Graduates Diploma in Education(PGDE) Teachers Towards Teaching Profession. Introduction: Attitude is defined as predisposition to respond.
The Resiliency Scale for Young Adults Revisited
Res.Asst. Nurten TERKES, Prof. Hicran BEKTAS
WrItIng Methodology SectIon (QuantItatIve Research)
Arely M. Hurtado1,2, Phillip D. Akutsu2, & Deanna L. Stammer1
Presentation transcript:

PSYCHOMETRIC PROPERTIES OF THE TURKISH VERSION OF COLUMBIA-SUICIDE SEVERITY RATING SCALE AMONG 12-18 YEAR-OLD ADOLESCENTS IN TURKEY Adem Gunes1, M.D., Ayse Kilincaslan1, M.D., Mehmet Eskin2, M.S. 1Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Istanbul School of Medicine, Istanbul University 2Department of Psychiatry, Aydin School of Medicine, Aydin University We warrant that we have no conflict of interest in general or in connection with this poster and no financial relationship with any pharmaceutical company. Poster ID24036 One Way ANOVA *p<0,05 **p<0,01 Group 1: Suicidal attempts in the last month Group 2: Major Depression Group 3: Clinical Sample Group 4: Community Sample CONCLUSIONS INTRODUCTION RESULT METHOD The Turkish version of the C-SSRS is a reliable and valid instrument that can be used for the assessment of suicide risk among adolescents between 12 and 18 years of age. The inter-rater reliability and internal consistency coefficients, and correlation values with other standard instruments are high. Current suicidal ideation subscale scores distinguish the last-month suicidal attempters from the other groups (depression, non-depressive psychiatric outpatient and non-psychiatric patient groups). Current suicidal ideation scores and current/lifetime intensity of suicide ideation subscale scores of the last month suicide attempters are different from non-depressive psychiatric and non-psychiatric samples, but similar to that of the depressive sample. Suicide and suicidal attempts are accepted as an important public health problem both in Turkey and worldwide. According to State Statistics Institute data, annual suicide rate in Turkey was 4.19/100.000 in 2013 (1). Studies done in Turkey showed that prevalence of suicidal attempts is still low in Turkey, however rate of increase is strikingly high (2). After the geriatric population (>75 years), the prevalence rates are the highest among adolescents between 15 and 19 years of age (1). Adolescent suicide attempts have become one of the most common psychiatric emergencies in recent years and there is a great need for studies investigating screening and treatment of suicide in this population (3,4). Clinical interview is very important to assess the suicide risk and structured assessment of suicidal ideation and behavior significantly improves identification of high-risk groups relative to a routine clinical interview (5). Although there is a few number of Turkish self-report suicide scales, there exist no standardized and structured assessment tools to evaluate suicidal risk in Turkey. Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) is one of the few and most commonly used standard measures that assesses both suicidal ideation and behavior. The aims of the present study are to assess the validity and reliability of the Turkish version of the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) and to determine the distinguishing properties of C-SSRS for the suicidal risk in different adolescent samples. Table 1. Descriptive data and suicidal ideation rates for each group Statistical analyses were performed using SPSS 20.0. Kappa and Cronbach-alpha values were calculated for the assessment of inter-rater agreement and internal consistency, respectively. Pearson test was used for correlations. The scores of the four clinical groups were assessed with One-Way Analysis of Variance (ANOVA) test, and Tukey HSD test was used for post-hoc comparisons. A p value of< 0.05 was accepted for statistical significance.   Group 1 (n=41) Group 2 (n=50) Group 3 Group 4 (n=70) p Gender (n/%) Male 3 (7.3) 18 (36) 28 (56) 31 (44.3) 0.001** Female 38 (92.7) 32 (64) 22 (44) 39 (55.7) Age (mean/SD) 15.63 (1.33) 15.06 (1.63) 14.38 (1.56) 14.88 (1.72) C-SSRS Suicide Ideation (n/%) No Ideation Last Month 9 (20.9) 7 (14) 43 (86) 61 (87.1) Lifetime 8 (19.5) 5 (10) 37 (74) 56 (80) Passive Ideation 4 (9.8) 19 (38) 2 (4) 3 (4.3) 5 (12.2) 11 (22) 7 (10) Active Ideation 0 (0) 10 (20) 5 (7.1) 6 (12) Ideation + Method 1 (2.4) 3 (6) 1 (1.4) 1 (2) Ideation + Intent 24 (58.5) 8 (16) 18 (16) Ideation + Plan 0,049* 0.049* RESULT The study sample included 131 females and 80 males. The mean age of the whole group was 14.95 ± 1.63. Age, gender and the most severe ideation of the participants according to groups are shown in Table 1. Concerning inter-rater reliability, kappa values for the most severe ideation scores in the last month and lifetime, were found to be 0.91 and 0.76, respectively. Cronbach alpha coefficients for intensity of ideation in the last month and lifetime were 0.91 and 0.93. No elevation was observed in these values when any of the items was removed. Most severe ideation scores of the C-SSRS were highly correlated with the suicide item of the CDI (last month: r=0.88 p<0.01; lifetime r=0.83, p<0.01), SPS-suicide subscale score (last month: r=0.83, p<0.01; lifetime r=0.82, p<0.01), SPS-total score (last month: r=0.77, p<0.01; lifetime r=0.78, p<0.01) and the MINI-suicide score (last month: r=0.88, p<0.01; lifetime r=0.82, p<0.01. The correlation coefficients were lower with the suicide items of the parent reported CBCL (item 18 “Deliberately harms self or attempts suicide, last month r=0.60, p<0.01; lifetime r=0.61, p<0.01 and for item 92 “talks about killing self”, last month r=0.57, p<0.01; lifetime r=0.60, p<0.01). Intensity of suicide ideation scores of the C-SSRS (last month and lifetime) scores were also strongly correlated with most of the above parameters. Pearson correlation values (p values and correlation coefficients) are summarized in Table 2. One-way between-groups ANOVA was applied to determine if the severity of suicidal ideation differentiates the four adolescent groups. The groups differed according to severity (last month and lifetime) and intensity (last month and lifetime) of suicidal ideation. Post-hoc Tukey HSD test revealed that the mean scores of the C-SSRS most severe suicide ideation scores in the last month was statistically higher in Group 1 (M= 2.87, SD= 1.81) compared to Group 2 (p<0.01, M=1.9, SD=1.48), Group 3 (p<0.01, M=.24, SD=0.62) and Group 4 (p<0.01, M=0.22, SD=0.64). Lifetime most severe suicide ideation scores of Group 1 (M=2.90, SD=1.78) was higher than Group 3 (p<0.01, M=0.48, SD=0.91) and Group 4 (p<0.01, M=0.34, SD=0.79) but similar to Group 2 (p=0.527, M=2.54, SD=1.55). Suicide attempt group showed significant difference in the scores of current and lifetime intensity of suicidal ideation (M=10, SD=6.9; M=10.43, SD=6.78) with group 3 (M=0.90, SD=2.54 current; M=1.68, SD=3.35 lifetime) and group 4 (M=0.84, SD=2.48 current; M=1.32, SD=3.01 lifetime), but not with group 2 (M=8.08, SD=5.21 current; M=10.46, SD=5.03 lifetime). METHOD Translation After obtaining necessary approvals from the local ethics committee and governmental authorities, the study was initiated. The Turkish translation of the C-SSRS was provided by Kelly Posner, the developer of the scale. Linguistic validation was conducted by several clinicians proficient in both Turkish and English and included four steps: revision of the scale by two of the researchers for clinical and cultural issues, independent comparison of the original and translated forms and revision by two psychiatrists experienced on adolescent suicide, establishment of the final version by the consultant who is experienced as a clinician and researcher in adolescent suicide and suicide scales, and the final revision of the draft after a pilot study with 20 participants for language intelligibility. Two clinicians completed the C-SSRS online education module and evaluated 25 cases for inter-rater reliability.   Instruments & Procedure The participants were recruited from Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Outpatient Clinic and Pediatric Emergency Service of the Istanbul Faculty of Medicine, and a General Practitioner (GP)’s office. Four different patient groups between the ages 12 and 18 were included in the study: suicide attempters in the last month (Group 1: n=41), major depression group (Group 2: n=50), non-depressive psychiatric outpatient group (Group 3: n=50), and non-psychiatric GP outpatient group (Group 4: n=70). The psychiatric diagnoses were given according to DSM-IV and patients with active psychosis, mental retardation and autistic spectrum disorder were excluded. Patients in the non-psychiatric outpatient group were excluded if they got any psychiatric diagnosis. All participants underwent psychiatric interview and filled in the C-SSRS, Suicide Probability Scale (SPS), MINI Suicidal Scale – Kid, Child Depression Inventory (CDI), Beck Hopelessness Scale (BHS) and the parents filled in the Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL). REFERENCES RESULT 1.Turkish State Statistics Institute, Suicide Statistics, 2013 (http://www.tuik.gov.tr/PreHaberBultenleri.do?id=16049) 2.Devrimci-Ozguven H, Sayıl I. Suicide attempts in Turkey: results of the WHO-EURO Multicentre Study on Suicidal behaviour. Can J Psychiatry 2003; 48:324-329. 3.Borges G, Benjet C. Suicide Ideation, Plan, and Attempt in the Mexican Adolescent Mental Health Survey. J . Am. Acad. Chıld Adolesc. Psychıatry. 2008; 47:1. 4.Eaton DK, Kann L, Kinchen S, Shanklin S, Flint KH. Hawkins J, Wechsler H. Youth risk behavior surveillance - United States, 2011. MMWR Surveill Summ, 2012; 61(4), 1–162. 5.Bongiovi-Garcia ME, Merville J, Almeida MG, Burke A, Ellis S, Stanley BH, Posner K, Mann JJ, Oquendo MA. Comparison of clinical and research assessments of diagnosis, suicide attempt history, and suicidal ideation in major depression. J Affect Disord 2009; 115:183–188 Table 2. Correlation between C-SSRS scores with other measures. C-SSRS (N=211) CDI suicide item CDI total score SPS suicide subscale SPS total score BHS CBCL item 18 item 92 int. score ext. score tot. MINI suicide KID total score MSI Last Month .905** .727** .831** .772** .697** .575** .545** .401** .338** .441** .857** MSI Lifetime .843** .720** .832** .769** 700** .596** .501** .396** 383** .454** .877** ISI Last Month .899** 745** .837** .780** .713** 562** .558** .412** .335** .446* .796** ISI Lifetime .734** .775** .696** .569** .605** .403** .363** .448** Suicide Last Month .421** .250** .379** .297** .247** .496** .440** .179** .256** .255** .710** Suicide Lifetime .548** .283** .529** .432** .360** .647** .555** .245** .322** .329** .806** Risk Level .691** .539** .673** .589** .504** .554** .364** .394** .437** .937** Pearson correlation *p < .05 **p < .01 C-SSRS: Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale, MSI: Most Severe Ideation, ISI: Intensity of Suicide Ideation, CDI: Child Depression Inventory, SPS: Suicide Probability Scale, BHS: Beck Hopelessness Scale, CBCL: Child Behavior Checklist, MINI: Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview for Children and Adolescents