Clinician Administered PTSD Scale for Children and Adolescents
Summary
The CAPS-CA is a 33-item clinician-administered PTSD interview for youths aged 8 to 18 years. It is a modified version of the adult CAPS.
Items were modified to make them age appropriate and picture response options were added. Practice questions help familiarize children with the assessment. The Life Events Checklist is used to identify traumatic events.
CAPS-CA is a structured interview providing a categorical diagnosis, as well as a measure of the severity of PTSD symptoms as defined by DSM-IV. It can be administered by any trained person and takes 30-60 minutes.
Author/Publisher Details
National Center for PTSD, Boston, USA
Date
Nader et al., 1996
Description
Like the CAPS, the CAPS-CA measures the frequency and intensity of symptoms associated with the 17 DSM-IV PTSD symptoms, as well as the impact of those symptoms on such aspects of functioning as overall distress, coping skills, and impairment. In addition to current and lifetime diagnoses, items assess overall severity, validity of ratings, associated symptoms, and coping strategies.
It takes 30-60 minutes to administer, (depending on the level of psychopathology) and slightly less to score. Training is required to administer this test, although all the necessary information for self-learning is available for free, using the adult manual.
Although ideal for research settings, it can be a little cumbersome for use in routine clinical practice especially for those less experienced with the interview.
Scoring
Items are scored on 5-point frequency (e.g., from 0 = “None of the Time” to 4 = “Most of the Time”) and 5 point intensity rating scales (e.g., from 0 = “Not a Problem” to 4 = “A Big Problem, I Have to Stop What I Am Doing”) for the past month.
It is recommended that the “1, 2” rule be used to determine a diagnosis; that is, a frequency score of 1 and an intensity score of 2 is required for a particular symptom to meet criterion (based on adult data, Weathers et al., 1999). The diagnosis is then made according to the DSM-IV algorithm (i.e., 1 “B” Criteria, 3 “C” Criteria, and 2 “D” Criteria, along with A, E, and F). A severity score for each symptom is calculated by summing the frequency and intensity scores, which can then be summed for all 17 symptom questions and/or for the three symptom clusters.
Psychometrics
The CAPS-CA was based on the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale developed for use with adults. The CAPS has strong psychometric properties
Key/Core References
References
Nader, K., Kriegler, J.A., Blake, D.D., Pynoos, R.S., Newman, E., & Weather, F.W. (1996). Clinician Administered PTSD Scale, Child and Adolescent Version. White River Junction, VT: National Center for PTSD
Additional Reviews
Ohan, J. L., Myers, K., Collett, B. R. (2002). Ten-year review of rating scales. IV: scales assessing trauma and its effects. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry, 41: 1401-22
Nader, K. O. (2004). Assessing traumatic experiences in children and adolescents: Self-reports of DSM PTSD Criteria B-D symptoms. In J. Wilson & T. Keane (Eds.), Assessing psychological trauma and PTSD, 2nd ed. (pp. 513-537). New York: Guilford Press
Further Information
Training for administering the CAPS is available through the instruction manual, and also on a downloadable CD-ROM, although since the download is large and time consuming it is also available for purchase. See: http://www.ptsd.va.gov/professional/assessment/overview/index.asp
Manual Available Only to ISTSS Members
A comprehensive administration manual is available for the Adult version of CAPS. The child adolescent version does not have a separate manual freely available. Users should make use of the standard CAPS manual.
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