| Literature DB >> 17064426 |
Eric Youngstrom1, Oren Meyers, Jennifer Kogos Youngstrom, Joseph R Calabrese, Robert L Findling.
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to review assessment research of bipolar disorder in children and adolescents. The review addresses numerous themes: the benefits and costs of involving clinical judgment in the diagnostic process, particularly with regard to diagnosis and mood severity ratings; the validity of parent, teacher, and youth self-report of manic symptoms; how much cross-situational consistency is typically shown in mood and behavior; the extent to which a parent's mental health status influences their report of child behavior; how different measures compare in terms of detecting bipolar disorder, the challenges in comparing the performance of measures across research groups, and the leading candidates for research or clinical use; evidence-based strategies for interpreting measures as diagnostic aids; how test performance changes when a test is used in a new setting and what implications this has for research samples as well as clinical practice; the role of family history of mood disorder within an assessment framework; and the implications of assessment research for the understanding of phenomenology of bipolar disorder from a developmental framework.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 17064426 DOI: 10.1017/S0954579406060494
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dev Psychopathol ISSN: 0954-5794