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Child PTSD Symptom Scale
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Summary
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The CPSS is used to measure post traumatic stress disorder severity
in children aged 8-18. It is made up of 17 items in part 1 and 7 items
in part 2. It takes approximately 20 minutes to administer as an
interview measure (by a clinician or a therapist) and 10 minutes to
complete as a self-report. Versions are available in English and
Spanish.
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Author/publisher details
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CPSS: Foa et al., (2001)
Correspondence to:
Edna B. Foa, Ph.D.
Center for the Treatment and Study of Anxiety
3535 Market Street, 6th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19104
foa@mail.med.upenn.edu
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Date
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2001
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Description
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The CPSS maps on DSM-IV criteria, and yields a PTSD total score as
well as scores on the re-experiencing, avoidance and hyperarousal
subscales. The CPSS has 24-items, 17 of which correspond to the DSM-IV
symptoms. In the first part of the questionnaire, respondents are asked
to "fill in the number that best describes how often that problem has
bothered [him/her] IN THE LAST TWO WEEKS." Answers are on a Likert-type
scale. 0 is not at all, 1 is once a week or less/once in a while, 2 is 2
to 4 times a week/half the time, and 3 is 5 or more times a week/almost
always. In the second part of the questionnaire, respondents are asked
about functional impairment, or how much the problems indicated in
section one have interfered with specific areas of life. These 7
questions are scored dichotomously as absent (0) or present (1). Scores
range from 0 -- 7, with higher scores indicating greater functional
impairment.
The CPSS can stand alone as a diagnostic tool for childhood and
adolescent PTSD, but can also be given as part of a battery of other
measures, such as the BDI or the Children's Global Assessment Scale
(CGAS), that indicate other factions of psychopathology.
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Languages
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Versions are available in English and Spanish.
Please contact the author for Spanish version and information on this
translation.
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Scoring and Psychometrics
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Scoring
Each of the 17 items corresponding to the DSM-IV criteria is rated on a
scale from 0 to 3; thus, the total score ranges from 0 to 51. This
measure is appropriate for children ages 8-18 years, and provides a
total score as well as a score for each of three symptom subscales.
Psychometrics
In the original article, (Foa et al., 2001) a clinical cutoff score of
greater or equal to 11 was established by inspecting the distribution of
total scale scores for children with high and low PTSD symptoms. This
yielded 95% sensitivity and 96% specificity. However, clinical
experiences suggest that a cutoff of 15 is more appropriate for
determining PTSD.
Internal consistency ranged from .70 - .89 for the total and
subscales symptom scores. Test-retest reliability was good to excellent
(.84 for the total score, .85 for reexperiencing, .63 for avoidance and
.76 for hyperarousal). Convergent validity was high: the CPSS correlated
.80 with the Child Posttraumatic Stress Reaction Index (Pynoos et al.,
1987). A discriminant functional analysis indicated that a linear
combination of the three subscales significantly discriminated between
diagnostic groups (Wilks lambda = .33, X2 (3) = 79.1,
p<.0001). The CPSS subscales correctly classified 94.7% of
the cases.
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Key/Core References
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Foa, E.B., Johnson, K.M., Feeny, N.C., &
Treadwell, K.R.H. (2001). The child PTSD
symptom scale (CPSS): A preliminary examination
of its psychometric properties. Journal of Clinical
Child Psychology, 30, 376-384.
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Further Information
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See paper or contact author : Edna Foa foa@mail.med.upenn.edu
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View manual
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This is a self explanatory self report tool or can be administered as
an interview. There are no specific administration instructions. For
details on interpretation see above information or consult the
references
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View tool
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Click here to view
ISTSS Members: Download
CPSS Child PTSD Symptom Scale (English Version)
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