Title: COSIG Assessment Training
1COSIG AssessmentTraining
2M.I.N.I
- MINI INTERNATIONAL NEUROPSYCHITRIC INTERVIEW
3Major Depressive EpisodeScreening Questions
- A1 Have you been consistently depressed or down,
- most of the day, nearly every day, for the
past two - weeks?
- A2 In the past two weeks, have you been much
less - interested in most things or much less
able to - enjoy the things you used to enjoy most of
the - time?
- If YES to either question, proceed to A3
- If NO to both questions, skip to Section B,
Dysthmia
4Major Depressive Episode (Continued)
- A3 Over the past two weeks, when you felt
- depressed or uninterested
- Was your appetite decreased or increased nearly
every day? Did your weight increase without
trying intentionally? - Did you have trouble sleeping nearly every night
(difficulty falling asleep, waking up in the
middle of the night, early morning wakening, or
sleeping excessively)?
5Major Depressive Episode (Continued)
- Did you talk or move more slowly than normal or
were you fidgety, restless, or having trouble
sitting still almost every day? - Did you feel tired or without energy almost every
day? - Did you feel worthless or guilty almost every
day? - Did you have difficulty concentrating or making
decisions almost every day? - Did you repeatedly consider hurting yourself,
feel suicidal, or wish that you were dead?
6Major Depressive Episode (Continued)
- If 5 or more of the 7 symptoms are YES in A3
then the diagnosis of Major Depressive Episode,
Current is made and proceed to A4 - If less than 5 of the 7 symptoms are YES in A3
then skip to Section B, Dysthmia
7Major Depressive Episode, Recurrent
- A4 During your lifetime, did you have other
periods of two - weeks or more when you felt depressed or
uninterested in - most things, and had most of the problems
we just talked - about?
- If YES, proceed to next question
- If NO, proceed to Section D, Manic Episode
- Did you ever have an interval of at least 2
months without - any depression and any loss of interest
between 2 episodes of - depression?
- If YES, Major Depressive Episode, Recurrent
- diagnosis is made
8DysthmiaScreening Question
- B1 Have you felt sad, low, or depressed most of
- the time for the last two years?
- If YES proceed to B2
- If NO skip to Section D, Manic Episode
9Dysthmia (Continued)
- B2 Was this period interrupted by your feeling
- OK for two months or more?
- If YES skip to Section D, Manic Episode
- If NO proceed to B3
10Dysthmia (Continued)
- B3 During this period of feeling depressed most
- of the time
- Did your appetite change significantly?
- Did you have trouble sleeping or sleep
excessively? - Did you feel tired or without energy?
- Did you lose self-confidence?
- Did you have trouble concentrating or making
decisions? - Did you feel hopeless?
11Dysthmia (Continued)
- If two or more symptoms in B3 are YES proceed
to B4 - If less than 2 symptoms are YES in B3 skip to
Section D, Manic Episode
12Dysthmia (Continued)
- B4 Did the symptoms of depression cause you
- significant distress or impair your ability
to - function at work, socially or in some other
- important way?
- If YES Dysthmia diagnosis is made
- If NO proceed to Section D, Manic Episode
13Manic and Hypomanic EpisodeScreening Questions
- D1a Have you ever had a period when you were
- feeling up or high or hyper or so
full of - energy or full of yourself that you got
into - trouble, or that other people thought you
were - not your usual self? (Do not consider
times - when you were intoxicated on drugs or
alcohol.) - If YES ask
- D1b Are you currently feeling up or high or
full - of energy?
14Manic and Hypomanic EpisodeScreening Questions
- D2a Have you ever been persistently irritable,
for - several days, so that you had arguments
or - verbal or physical fights, or shouted at
people - outside your family? Have you or others
- noticed that you have been more
irritable or - over reacted, compared to other people,
even in - situations that you felt were justified?
- If Yes ask
- D2b Are you currently feeling persistently
irritable?
15Manic or Hypomanic Episode(Continued)
- If D1b or D2b is YES proceed to D3 and explore
only current episode - If D1b and D2b are NO proceed to D3 and explore
the most problematic past episode - If D1a and D2a are both NO skip to Section E,
Panic Disorder
16Manic and Hypomanic Episode(Continued)
- D3 During the times when you felt high, full of
- energy, or irritable did you
- Feel that you could do things others couldnt do,
or that you were an especially important person? - Need less sleep (for example, feel rested after
only a few hours sleep)? - Talk too much without stopping, or so fast that
people had difficulty understanding? - Have racing thoughts?
17Manic and Hypomanic Episode(Continued)
- D3 During the times when you felt high, full of
- energy, or irritable did you (continued)
- Become easily distracted so that any little
interruption could distract you? - Become so active or physically restless that
others were worried about you? - Want so much to engage in pleasurable activities
that you ignored the risks or consequences (for
example, spending sprees, reckless driving, or
sexual indiscretions)?
18Manic and Hypomanic Episode(Continued)
- If 3 or more of the D3 symptoms are YES (or 4
or more symptoms if D1a is NO when rating past
episode or D1b is NO when rating current
episode) then proceed to D4 - If less than 3 symptoms are present, skip to
Section E, Panic Disorder
19Manic or Hypomanic Episode(Continued)
- D4 Did these symptoms last at least a week and
- cause significant problems at home, at
work, - socially, or at school, or were you
hospitalized - for these problems?
- If D4 is NO the diagnosis of Hypomanic Episode
(Current or Past) is made - If D4 is YES the diagnosis of Manic Episode
(Current or Past) is made
20Panic DisorderScreening Questions
- E1a Have you, on more than one occasion, had
- spells or attacks when you suddenly felt
- anxious, frightened, uncomfortable or
uneasy, even - in situations where most people would not
feel that - way?
- E1b Did the spells surge to a peak within 10
minutes of - starting?
- If E1a and E1b are YES then proceed to E2
21Panic Disorder(Continued)
- E2 At any time in the past, did any of those
spells - or attacks come on unexpectedly or occur in
- an unpredictable manner?
- If E2 is YES proceed to E3
- If E2 is NO skip to Section H, Obsessive
Compulsive Disorder
22Panic Disorder(Continued)
- E3 Have you ever had one such attack followed
- by a month or more of persistent concern
- about having another attack, or worries
about - the consequences of the attack?
23Panic Disorder(Continued)
- E4 During the worst spell that you can remember
- Did you have skipping, racing, or pounding of
your heart? - Did you have sweating or clammy hands?
- Were you trembling or shaking?
- Did you have shortness of breath or difficulty
breathing? - Did you have a choking sensation or lump in your
throat?
24Panic Disorder(Continued)
- E4 During the worst spell that you can remember
- Did you have chest pain, pressure, or discomfort?
- Did you have nausea, stomach problems, or sudden
diarrhea? - Did you feel dizzy, unsteady, lightheaded, or
faint? - Did things around you feel strange, unreal,
detached or unfamiliar, or did you feel outside
of or detached from part or all of your body?
25Panic Disorder(Continued)
- E4 During the worst spell that you can remember
- Did you fear that you were losing control or
going crazy? - Did you fear that you were dying?
- Did you have tingling or numbness in parts of
your body? - Did you have hot flushes or chills?
26Panic Disorder(Continued)
- If E3 is YES and 4 or more of the symptoms in
E4 are YES, diagnosis of Panic Disorder,
Lifetime is made and proceed to E7 - E7 In the past month, did you have such attacks
- repeatedly (2 or more) followed by
persistent - concern about having another attack?
- If E7 is YES, diagnosis of
- Panic Disorder, Current is made
27Obsessive-Compulsive DisorderScreening Question
- H1 In the past month, have you been bothered by
- recurrent thoughts, impulses, or images
that - were unwanted, distasteful, inappropriate,
- intrusive, or distressing?
- If H1 is YES proceed to H2
- IF H1 is NO skip to H4
28Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder(Continued)
- H2 Did they keep coming back into your mind
- even when you tried to ignore or get rid
of - them?
- IF H2 is YES proceed to H3
- If H2 is NO skip to H4
29Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder(Continued)
- H3 Do you think that these obsessions are the
- product of your own mind and that they are
- not imposed from the outside?
- If YES then criteria for Obsessions has
- been met and proceed to H4
30Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder(Continued)
- H4 In the past month, did you do something
repeatedly - without being able to resist doing it,
like washing or - cleaning excessively, counting or checking
things - over and over, or repeating, collecting,
arranging - things, or other superstitious rituals?
- If YES then criteria for Compulsions has been
met - and proceed to H5
- If both H3 and H4 are NO skip to Section J,
Alcohol Abuse and Dependence
31Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder(Continued)
- H5 Did you recognize that either these obsessive
- thoughts or these compulsive behaviors
were - excessive or unreasonable?
- If H5 is YES proceed to H6
- If H5 is NO skip to Section J, Alcohol
- Abuse and Dependence
32Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder(Continued)
- H6 Did these obsessive thoughts and/or
- compulsive behaviors significantly
interfere - with your normal routine, occupational
- functioning, usual social activities, or
- relationships, or did they take more than
one - hour a day?
- If YES then diagnosis of Obsessive-Compulsive
Disorder is made
33Posttraumatic Stress DisorderScreening Questions
- I1 Have you ever experienced or witnessed or had
- to deal with an extremely traumatic event
that - included actual or threatened death or
serious - injury to you or someone else?
- If YES proceed to I2
- If NO skip to Section J, Alcohol Abuse
- and Dependence
34Posttraumatic Stress DisorderScreening Questions
- I2 Did you respond with intense fear,
- helplessness, or horror?
- If YES proceed to I3
- If NO skip to section J, Alcohol Abuse
- and Dependence
35Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
- I3 During the past month, have you re-
- experienced the event in a distressing way
(such - as dreams, intense recollections,
flashbacks, or - physical reactions)?
- If YES proceed to I4
- If NO skip to Section J, Alcohol Abuse
- and Dependence
36Posttraumatic Stress Disorder(Continued)
- I4 In the past month
- Have you avoided thinking about or talking about
the event? - Have you avoided activities, places, or people
that remind you of the event? - Have you had trouble recalling some important
part of what happened? - Have you become much less interested in hobbies
and social activities?
37Posttraumatic Stress Disorder(Continued)
- I4 In the past month
- Have you felt detached or estranged from others?
- Have you noticed that your feelings are numbed?
- Have you felt that your life will be shortened or
that you will die sooner than other people? - If 3 or more of the 7 symptoms in I4 are
- YES proceed to I5
- If less than 3 symptoms are YES skip to Section
J, Alcohol Abuse and Dependence
38Posttraumatic Stress Disorder(Continued)
- I5 In the past month
- Have you had difficulty sleeping?
- Were you especially irritable or did you have
outbursts of anger? - Have difficulty concentrating?
- Were you nervous or constantly on your guard?
- Were you easily startled?
- If 2 or more symptoms in I5 are YES proceed to
I6 - If less than 2 symptoms are YES skip to Section
J
39Posttraumatic Stress Disorder(Continued)
- I6 During the past month, have these problems
- significantly interfered with your work or
social - activities, or caused significant distress?
- If YES diagnosis of Posttraumatic Stress
Disorder is made - If NO proceed to Section J, Alcohol Abuse
- and Dependence
40Alcohol Abuse and DependenceScreening Question
- J1 In the past 12 months, have you had 3 or more
- alcoholic drinks within a 3 hour period on 3
or - more occasions?
- If YES proceed to J2
- If NO skip to Section K, Psychoactive Substance
Use Disorders
41Alcohol Abuse and Dependence(Continued)
- J2 In the past 12 months
- Did you need to drink more in order to get the
same effect that you got when you first started
drinking? - When you cut down on drinking, did your hands
shake, did you sweat or feel agitated? Did you
drink to avoid these symptoms or to avoid being
hung over, for example the shakes, sweating, or
agitation? (If YES to either, code YES)
42Alcohol Abuse and Dependence(Continued)
- J2 In the past 12 months
- During the times when you drank alcohol, did you
end up drinking more than you planned when you
started? - Have you tried to reduce or stop drinking alcohol
but failed? - On the days that you drank, did you spend
substantial time in obtaining alcohol, drinking,
or recovering from the effects of alcohol?
43Alcohol Abuse and Dependence(Continued)
- J2 In the past 12 months
- Did you spend less time working, enjoying
hobbies, or being with others because of your
drinking? - Have you continued to drink even though you knew
that the drinking caused you health or emotional
problems?
44Alcohol Abuse and Dependence(Continued)
- If 3 or more questions in J2 are YES then
diagnosis of Alcohol Dependence is made and skip
to Section K, Psychoactive Substance - Use Disorders
- If less than 3 questions in J2 are YES then
proceed to J3 to assess for Alcohol Abuse
45Alcohol Abuse and Dependence(Continued)
- J3 In the past 12 months
- Have you been intoxicated, high, or hung over
more than once when you had other
responsibilities at school, work, or at home?
Did this cause any problems? (Code YES only if
this caused problems.) - Were you intoxicated more than once in any
situation where you were physically at risk, for
example, driving a car, riding a motorbike, using
machinery, etc.?
46Alcohol Abuse and Dependence(Continued)
- J3 In the past 12 months
- Did you have legal problems more than once
because of your drinking, for example, an arrest
or disorderly conduct? - Did you continue to drink even though your
drinking caused problems with your family or
other people?
47Alcohol Abuse and Dependence(Continued)
- If one or more questions in J3 are YES then
diagnosis of Alcohol Abuse is made - If no questions in J3 are YES proceed to
Section K, Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders
48Psychoactive Substance Use DisordersScreening
Question
- K1 Now I am going to show (or read) you a list
- of street drugs or medications. In the
past 12 - months, did you take any of these drugs
more - than once, to get high, to feel better, or
to - change your mood?
- If YES proceed to K2
- If NO skip to Section L, Psychotic Disorders
49Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders(Continued)
- K2 Considering your use of (specified drug), in
the past - 12 months
- Have you found that you needed to use more
(specified drug) to get the same effect that you
did when you first started taking it? - When you reduced or stopped using (specified
drug), did you have withdrawal symptoms (aches,
shaking, fever, weakness, diarrhea, nausea,
sweating, heart pounding, difficulty sleeping, or
feeling agitated, anxious, irritable, or
depressed)? Did you use any drug(s) to keep
yourself from getting sick (withdrawal symptoms)
or so that you would feel better? (If YES to
either, code YES)
50Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders(Continued)
- K2 Considering your use of (specified drug), in
the past - 12 months
- Have you often found that when you used
(specified drug), you ended up taking more than
you thought you would? - Have you tried to reduce or stop taking
(specified drug) but failed? - On the days that you used (specified drug), did
you spend substantial time (gt 2 hours),
obtaining, using, or in recovering from the drug,
or thinking about the drug?
51Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders(Continued)
- K2 Considering your use of (specified drug), in
- the past 12 months
- Did you spend less time working, enjoying
hobbies, or being with family or friends because
of your drug use? - Have you continued to use (specified drug) even
though it caused you health or mental problems?
52Psychoactive Substance Use Disorders(Continued)
- If 3 or more of the questions in K2 are
- YES then diagnosis of Substance
- Dependence is made
- If less than 3 questions in K2 are YES proceed
to K3 to assess Substance Abuse
53Psychoactive Substance Use Disorder(Continued)
- K3 Considering your use of (specified drug), in
the past - 12 months
- Have you been intoxicated, high, or hung over
from (specified drug) more than once, when you
had other responsibilities at school, at work, or
at home? Did this cause any problems? (Code
YES only if this caused problems) - Have you been high or intoxicated from (specified
drug) more than once in any situation where you
were physically at risk (for exammple, driving a
car, riding a motorbike, using machinery,
boating, etc.)?
54Psychoactive Substance Use Disorder(Continued)
- K3 Considering your use of (specified drug), in
the past - 12 months
- Did you have legal problems more than once
because of your drug use, for example, an arrest
or disorderly conduct? - Did you continue to use (specified drug) even
though it cause problems with your family or
other people? - If one or more of the questions in K3 are YES
- then diagnosis of Substance Abuse is made
55Psychotic Disorders
- There are no screening questions for the
Psychotic Disorders section - Ask for an example of each question answered
positively. Code YES only if the examples
clearly show a distortion of thought or of
perception or if they are not culturally
appropriate.
56Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- Before coding, investigate whether delusions
qualify as bizarre. - Delusions are bizarre if clearly implausible,
absurd, not understandable, and cannot derive
from ordinary life experience. - Hallucinations are coded bizarre if a voice
comments on the persons thoughts or behavior, or
when two or more voices are conversing with each
other.
57Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- Now I am going to ask you about unusual
experiences that some people have - L1 Have you ever believed that people were
- spying on you, or that someone was plotting
- against you, or trying to hurt you? (Note
Ask - for examples to rule out actual stalking.)
- If YES Do you currently believe these things?
58Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L2 Have you ever believed that someone was
- reading your mind or could hear your
- thoughts, or that you could actually read
- someones mind or hear what another person
- was thinking?
- If YES Do you currently believe these things?
59Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L3 Have you ever believed that someone or some
- force outside yourself put thoughts in your
- mind that were not your own, or made you
act - in a way that was not your usual self?
Have - you ever felt that you were possessed?
- If YES Do you currently believe these things?
60Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L4 Have you ever believed that you were being
- sent special messages through the TV,
radio, - or newspaper, or that a person you did not
- personally know was particularly interested
in - you?
- If YES Do you currently believe these things?
61Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L5 Have your relatives or friends ever
considered any of - your beliefs strange or unusual?
- Note Ask for examples and only code YES if
the - examples are clearly delusional ideas that
were not - explored in questions L1-L4. For example,
somatic or - religious delusions or delusions of
grandiosity, - jealousy, guilt, ruin, destitution, etc.
- If YES Do they currently consider your
beliefs as - strange?
62Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L6 Have you ever heard things other people
couldnt - hear, such as voices?
- Note Hallucinations are scored bizarre only
if patient - answers YES to the following
- If YES Did you hear a voice commenting on your
- thoughts or behavior or did you hear two or
more - voices talking to each other?
- If YES Have you heard these things in the past
month?
63Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L7 Have you ever had visions when you were
- awake or have you ever seen things other
- people couldnt see?
- Note Check to see if these are culturally
- appropriate.
- If YES Have you seen these things in the past
- month?
64Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- Clinicians Judgment Items
- L8 Is the patient currently exhibiting
incoherence, - disorganized speech, or marked loosening of
- associations?
- L9 Is the patient currently exhibiting
disorganized - or catatonic behavior?
65Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- Clinicians Judgment Items
- L10 Are negative symptoms of schizophrenia,
- such as affective flattening, poverty of
speech - (alogia) or an inability to initiate or
persist in - goal-directed activities (avolition),
prominent - during the interview?
66Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- If one or more of the questions from L1a to L7b
- are YES or YES Bizarre and also met
criteria for Major Depressive Episode (Current or
Recurrent) or Manic or Hypomanic Episode (Current
or Past) then proceed to L11b
67Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L11b You told me earlier that you had periods
- when you felt (depressed/high/persistent
ly - irritable).
- Were the beliefs and experiences you just
- described (symptoms coded YES from
- L1a to L7a) restricted exclusively to
times - when you were feeling depressed/high/
- irritable?
68Psychotic Disorders(Continued0
- If the patient ever had a period of at least 2
weeks of having these beliefs or experiences
(psychotic symptoms) when they were not
depressed, high or irritable, code NO on both
Mood Disorder with Psychotic Features, Lifetime
and Current and proceed to L13 - If L11b is YES then diagnosis of Mood Disorder
with Psychotic Features, Lifetime is made and
proceed to L12
69Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- If one or more of the questions from L1b to L7b
- are YES or YES Bizarre and also met
criteria for Major Depressive Episode, Current or
Manic or Hypomanic Episode, Current then
diagnosis of Mood Disorder with Psychotic
Features, Current is made
70Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L13 Are one or more of the L1b L7b questions
coded YES Bizarre? - OR
- Are 2 or more of the L1b-L7b questions coded
YES (rather than YES Bizarre)? - If YES then diagnosis of Psychotic
- Disorder, Current is made
71Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- L14 Is L13 coded YES for Psychotic Disorder,
- Current diagnosis
- OR
- Are one or more questions from L1a L7a coded
- YES Bizarre
- OR
- Are 2 or more questions from L1a L7a coded
YES - (rather than YES Bizarre)
- AND
- Did at least two of the psychotic symptoms occur
during - the same time period?
72Psychotic Disorders(Continued)
- If any of the conditions in L14 are met,
- the diagnosis of Psychotic Disorder, Lifetime
- is made and proceed to Section O, Generalized
Anxiety Disorder
73Generalized Anxiety DisorderScreening Questions
- O1 Have you worried excessively or been anxious
- about several things over the past 6
months? - Are these worries present most days?
- If YES to both of these questions AND the
patients anxiety is not restricted exclusively
to, or better explained by any disorder prior to - this point, proceed to O2
74Generalized Anxiety Disorder(Continued)
- O2 Do you find it difficult to control the
worries - or do they interfere with your ability to
focus - on what you are doing?
- If YES proceed to O3
- If NO interview is complete
75Generalized Anxiety Disorder(Continued)
- O3 For the following items, code NO if the
- symptoms are confined to features of any
- disorders explored prior to this point.
- When you were anxious over the past 6 months
- did you, most of the time
- Feel restless, keyed up, or on edge?
- Feel tense?
- Feel tired, weak, or exhausted easily?
76Generalized Anxiety Disorder(Continued)
- O3 When you were anxious over the past 6
- months, did you, most of the time
- Have difficulty concentrating or find your mind
going blank? - Feel irritable?
- Have difficulty sleeping (difficulty falling
asleep, waking up in the middle of the night,
early morning wakening or sleeping excessively)?
77Generalized Anxiety Disorder(Continued)
- If 3 or more of the symptoms in O3 are
- coded YES then diagnosis of
- Generalized Anxiety Disorder is made
- If less than 3 symptoms are YES interview
- is complete
78Brief Symptom Inventory
79Brief Symptom Inventory
- The BSI is a client self-report that measures
psychological symptom severity on nine primary
dimensions and three global severity indices. - The inventory contains 53 items and takes
approximately 8-10 minutes to complete. - The BSI is used at intake to assess psychiatric
symptom severity and to measure patient progress
during treatment.
80BSI Administration
- Instructions
- The BSI test consists of a list of problems
people sometimes have. Read each one carefully
and circle the number of the response that best
describes HOW MUCH THAT PROBLEM HAS DISTRESSED
YOU OR BOTHERED YOU DURING THE PAST 7 DAYS,
INCLUDING TODAY. Circle only one number for each
problem. Do not skip any items. If you change
your mind, draw an X through your original answer
and then circle your new answer. Read the
example before you begin. If you have any
questions, please ask them now.
81BSI Example Item
82BSI Primary Symptom Scales
- Somatization (SOM) Reflects distress arising
from perceptions of body dysfunction. Items
focus on cardiovascular, gastrointestinal,
respiratory complaints, and other somatic
symptoms. - Obsessive-Compulsive (O-C) Focuses on thoughts,
impulses, and actions that are experienced as
unremitting and irresistible, as well as
associated performance deficits.
83BSI Primary Symptom Scales
- Interpersonal Sensitivity (I-S) Assesses
feelings of personal inadequacy and inferiority,
particularly in comparison to others. - Depression (DEP) Reflects a representative
range of the indications of clinical depression,
such as dysphoric mood and loss of interest. - Anxiety (ANX) Concerns general signs of
nervousness, tension, fear, and panic attacks.
84BSI Primary Symptom Scales
- Hostility (HOS) Measures thoughts, feelings and
actions associated with chronic anger. - Phobic Anxiety (PHOB) Assesses persistent fear
responses to certain stimuli that are irrational
and disproportionate to the situation. - Paranoid Ideation (PAR) Concerns paranoid and
disordered thinking, such as delusions,
suspiciousness, and hostility.
85BSI Primary Symptom Scales
- Psychoticism (PSY) Measures certain aspects of
schizoid lifestyle, such as interpersonal
withdrawal, alienation, and thought control. - Additional Items There are four items that do
not belong to a particular scale but are included
because they possess clinical significance and
contribute to the global severity measures.
86BSI Global Symptom Indices
- Global Severity Index Provides an overall
severity index based on the average score of all
item responses. - Positive Symptom Total The total number of
items with a positive or non-zero response. - Positive Symptom Distress Index Provides a
severity index based on the average score of all
positive symptom items.
87BSI Scoring
88BSI Scoring
89BSI Profile
90Brief Derogatis Psychiatric Rating Scale
91Brief Derogatis Psychiatric Rating Scale
92Substance Abuse Treatment Scale
93Substance Abuse Treatment Scale(SATS)
- The SATS is a brief clinician rating of the
clients stage of engagement in substance abuse
treatment. The clinician rates the clients
level of engagement on an 8-point scale.
94Substance Abuse Treatment Scale
- Pre-engagement
- Engagement
- Early Persuasion
- Late Persuasion
- Early Active Treatment
- Late Active Treatment
- Relapse Prevention
- In Remission or Recovery
95Wrap-Around Services Assessment
96Wrap-Around Services Assessment
- This client-report assessment is designed
- to assist in identifying service needs and
monitor receipt of service types on a monthly
basis.
97Wrap-Around Services Assessment
98Client Evaluation of Self and Treatment
99Client Evaluation of Self and Treatment (CEST)
-
- The CEST survey consists of items that measure
areas of client psychosocial functioning and
perception of treatment. For this project, only
the eight scales measuring the domains of
treatment motivation and treatment process will
be used.
100CEST Treatment Motivation Scales
- This domain measures clients motivation for
substance abuse treatment. Treatment motivation
is a central factor in rehabilitating individuals
with alcohol and drug problems because it is
associated with retention and active
participation in the treatment process. - Two scales contribute to the Treatment
Motivation domain.
101CEST Treatment Motivation Scales
- Desires Help Reflects the degree to which
clients recognize they have a substance abuse
problem and desire help. - Ready for Treatment Assesses the level of
commitment clients have to participate in the
current treatment program.
102CEST Treatment Motivation Scales
-
- Problem recognition and commitment to the
treatment process are related but distinct
components determining treatment motivation. For
example, clients may be able to identify that
they have a substance abuse problem and need help
but also be unwilling to commit to treatment at
the current time.
103CEST Treatment Process Scales
- This domain assesses elements of client
engagement in treatment and quality of social
network support. Client perceptions of treatment
needs and participation, therapeutic relationship
with counselors, and support for recovery in and
outside of the treatment program are important
factors in determining retention and treatment
outcomes. - The Treatment Process domain is composed of
six scales.
104CEST Treatment Process Scales
- Needs More Treatment Assesses the types of
services that clients feel they need during
treatment to address individual issues. - Satisfied with Treatment Reflects client
satisfaction with the quality of the treatment
program. - Rapport with Counselors Measures the degree of
therapeutic alliance that clients have with
counselors.
105CEST Treatment Process Scales
- Participates in Treatment Concerns clients
perceptions of the extent to which they are
participating in and benefiting from the
treatment process. - Peer Support Measures the amount of support that
clients feel from other clients in the treatment
program. - Social Support Assesses the degree of support
for recovery that clients feel from family and
friends.
106CEST Treatment Process Scales
- High scores on the Needs More Treatment,
Satisfied with Treatment, Rapport with
Counselors, and Participates in Treatment - indicate greater levels of treatment engagement
- suggest that clients are able to identify areas
in need of treatment, feel comfortable with
therapists, are actively participating in and
benefiting from the treatment process, and - indicate clients are satisfied with the treatment
experience.
107CEST Treatment Process Scales
- High scores on the Peer Support and Social
Support scales - suggest that clients perceive other clients in
the program and individuals in their external
social network as a source of support in the
recovery process - indicate that clients have established positive
relationships with other clients and feel that
family and friends are supportive of the
treatment process and recovery
108Administration of Evaluation Measures
109Contact Information
- Lori Mangrum, Ph.D.
- Addiction Research Institute
- University of Texas at Austin
- lmangrum_at_mail.utexas.edu
- (512) 232-0616