Literature DB >> 26450457

Evaluating the Responsiveness to Therapeutic Change with Routine Outcome Monitoring: A Comparison of the Symptom Questionnaire-48 (SQ-48) with the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) and the Outcome Questionnaire-45 (OQ-45).

Ingrid V E Carlier1, Viktória Kovács1, Martijn S van Noorden1, Christina van der Feltz-Cornelis2,3, Nanda Mooij4, Yvonne W M Schulte-van Maaren1, Albert M van Hemert1, Frans G Zitman1, Erik J Giltay1.   

Abstract

Assessment of psychological distress is important, because it may help to monitor treatment effects and predict treatment outcomes. We previously developed the 48-item Symptom Questionnaire (SQ-48) as a public domain self-report psychological distress instrument and showed good internal consistency as well as good convergent and divergent validity among clinical and non-clinical samples. The present study, conducted among psychiatric outpatients in a routine clinical setting, describes additional psychometric properties of the SQ-48. The primary focus is on responsiveness to therapeutic change, which to date has been rarely examined within psychiatry or clinical psychology. Since a questionnaire should also be stable when no clinically important change occurs, we also examined test-retest reliability within a test-retest design before treatment (n = 43). A pre-treatment/post-treatment design was used for responsiveness to therapeutic change, comparing the SQ-48 with two internationally widely used instruments: the Brief Symptom Inventory (n = 97) and the Outcome Questionnaire-45 (n = 109). The results showed that the SQ-48 has excellent test-retest reliability and good responsiveness to therapeutic change, without significant differences between the questionnaires in terms of responsiveness. In sum, the SQ-48 is a psychometrically sound public domain self-report instrument that can be used for routine outcome monitoring, as a benchmark tool or for research purposes.
Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Key Practitioner Message The SQ-48 is developed as a public domain self-report questionnaire, in line with growing efforts to develop clinical instruments that are free of charge. The SQ-48 has excellent test-retest reliability and good responsiveness to therapeutic change or patient progress. There were no significant differences in terms of responsiveness between the SQ-48 and BSI or OQ-45. The SQ-48 can be used as a routine evaluation outcome measure for quality assurance in clinical practice. Providing feedback on patient progress via outcome measures could contribute to the enhancement of treatment outcomes. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI); Outcome Questionnaire-45 (OQ-45); Psychological Distress; Psychopathology; Responsiveness; Symptom Questionnaire-48 (SQ-48)

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26450457     DOI: 10.1002/cpp.1978

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Psychol Psychother        ISSN: 1063-3995


  6 in total

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  6 in total

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