International Epidemiology of Child and Adolescent Psychopathology II : Integration and Applications of Dimensional Findings From 44 Societies (CROSBI ID 188535)
Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Rescorla, Leslie ; Ivanova, Y. Masha ; Achenbach, M. Thomas ; Begovac, Ivan ; Chahed, Myriam ; Drugli, May Britt ; Ribas, Deisy ; Fung, S.S. Emerich, Daniel ; Haider, Mariam ; Hansson, Kjell , Hewitt, Nohelia ; Jaimes, Stefanny ; Larsson, Bo ; Maggiolini, Alfio ; Marković, Jasminka ; Mitrović, Dragan ; Moreira, Paulo ; Tiago Oliveira, Jo~ao, Olsson, Martin ; Phaik Ooi, Yoon ; Petot, Djaouida ; Pisa, Cecilia ; Pomalima, Rolando ; Monzani da Rocha, Marina ; Rudan, Vlasta ; Sekulić, Slobodan ; Shahini, Mimoza ; Ferreira de Mattos Silvares, Edwiges ; Szirovicza, Lajos ; Valverde, Jose´ ; Anderssen Vera, Luis ; Villa, Maria Clara ; Viola, Laura ; Woo, Bernardine ; Yuqing Zhang, Eugene
engleski
International Epidemiology of Child and Adolescent Psychopathology II : Integration and Applications of Dimensional Findings From 44 Societies
Objective: To build on Achenbach, Rescorla, and Ivanova (2012) by (a) reporting newinternational findings for parent, teacher, and self-ratings on the Child Behavior Checklist, Youth Self-Report, and Teacher’s Report Form ; (b) testing the fit of syndrome models to new data from 17 societies, including previously underrepresented regions ; (c) testing effects of society, gender, and age in 44 societies by integrating new and previous data ; (d) testing cross-society correlations between mean item ratings ; (e) describing the construction of multisociety norms ; (f) illustrating clinical applications. Method: Confirmatory factor analyses (CFAs) of parent, teacher, and self-ratings, performed separately for each society ; tests of societal, gender, and age effects on dimensional syndrome scales, DSM-oriented scales, Internalizing, Externalizing, and Total Problems scales ; tests of agreement between low, medium, and high ratings of problem items across societies. Results: CFAs supported the tested syndrome models in all societies according to the primary fit index (Root Mean Square Error of Approximation [RMSEA]), but less consistently according to other indices ; effect sizes were small-to-medium for societal differences in scale scores, but very small for gender, age, and interactionswith society ; items received similarly low, medium, or high ratings in different societies ; problem scores from 44 societies fit three sets of multisociety norms. Conclusions: Statistically derived syndrome models fit parent, teacher, and self-ratings when tested individually in all 44 societies according to RMSEAs (but less consistently according to other indices). Small to medium differences in scale scores among societies supported the use of low-, medium-, and high scoring norms in clinical assessment of individual children.
international; psychopathology; epidemiology; syndromes; confirmatory factor analysis (CFA);
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Podaci o izdanju
51 (12)
2012.
1273-1283
objavljeno
0890-8567
10.1016/j.jaac.2012.09.012
Povezanost rada
Kliničke medicinske znanosti, Etnologija i antropologija, Biologija