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Use of the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire to identify treatment needs in looked-after children referred to CAMHS
22
Citations
24
References
2019
Year
Family MedicineAdolescent Behavioral HealthDifficulties QuestionnaireMental Health InterventionMental HealthMental Health DifficultiesChild Mental HealthPrimary CareClinical PsychologyChild AssessmentTreatment NeedsMental Health CounselingHealth SciencesTeen Mental HealthChild PsychologyChild Well-beingPsychiatryChildren's Mental HealthLooked-after ChildrenChild DevelopmentCommunity Mental HealthChild HealthAdolescent Primary CarePediatricsAdult Mental HealthMedicineChild PsychiatryYouth Behavioral Health
Background: In England and Wales, the single-informant Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) is used to assess and monitor looked-after children’s (LAC) mental health; and some targeted Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS) include a minimum SDQ score in their acceptance criteria. However, its ability to identify LAC who need mental health treatment is insufficiently understood. Methods: One hundred and forty four LAC referrals to a Targeted CAMHS Team were screened as part of a larger study. To establish how well the SDQ identified children who required treatment, Total Difficulties Scores from single-informant SDQs submitted at referral were compared to treatment recommendations following routine CAMHS assessment in a real-world setting. To explain the results, clinicians ( n = 9) from the team were interviewed and key themes identified using thematic analysis. Results: AUROC analysis found that the single-informant SDQ discriminated between children who were assessed as needing a mental health intervention and those who did not with low accuracy when SDQs were completed by carers or young people themselves, and moderate accuracy for teacher-completed SDQs. Optimal cutoff scores are calculated and are lower than advised in scoring guidance. Key themes from clinician interviews identified possible gaps and limitations: Developmental trauma and attachment difficulties, A different kind of patient?, Seeing the “bad” but neglecting the sad, and The importance of clinical judgment. Conclusions: Contrary to current UK Government policy, this study suggests that the single-report SDQ should not be relied upon as a sole means of identifying mental health difficulties in this vulnerable, high-risk population.
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