My colleagues and I have used the following questionnaire with parents of 7-17 year old normal children, and also with samples of children with ADHD and with Tourette, and now trying to use it also with children on the Autistic spectrum. Excellent reliability and associations with important aspects of parenting and parent-child relationship. Can also be administered to children.
Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS; Gratz & Roemer)
Best
Esther
Prof. Esther Cohen
(Emerita) Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Baruch Ivcher School of Psychology
Interdisciplinary Center (IDC) Herzliya
Israel
Tel-0773330811
0528958848
http//www.idc.ac.il/psychology בית ספר ברוך איבצ'ר לפסיכולוגיה בפייסבוק >>
From: list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org [mailto:list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org] On Behalf Of Nicholas Midgley
Sent: Wednesday, October 05, 2016 6:29 PM
To: caftr@psychotherapyresearch.org
Subject: Re: CaFTR Parent stress measures and parent-child relationship measures
Following up from Sue's query - in case people aren't aware of it, I'm attaching a document that the EBPU at Anna Freud created, about measures for child well being and mental health (free to download from their website) - and see also this link.
https://www.ucl.ac.uk/ebpu/docs/publication_files/mental_health_outcome_measures_for_children_yp
Best wishes,
Nick
2 How to use this booklet Measures have been organised into two key domains: 1) mental health/psychological adjustment measures and |
From: list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org <list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org> on behalf of Tracy A. Prout <tracyprout@gmail.com>
Sent: 04 October 2016 17:40:00
To: caftr@psychotherapyresearch.org
Subject: Re: CaFTR Parent stress measures and parent-child relationship measures
We use the PSI in our clinic and I am also using it in a new psychotherapy RCT. It is easy for parents to complete and has good psychometric properties. It only provides a few subscale scores. I would like more detail but it's good for what it intends to do. We just starting using the self efficacy measure Nick mentioned so I can't comment on it yet.
Tracy
> On Oct 4, 2016, at 12:27 PM, Geoffrey Goodman <Geoffrey.Goodman@liu.edu> wrote:
>
> I used the PSI with a sample of psychiatrically hospitalized prepubertal children many years ago. I didn't find any theoretically meaningful links to the children's behavioral problems. That doesn't mean that the PSI doesn't have value, however. I would certainly take a look at it, particularly because it's widely used in the parenting literature (at least here in the States).
>
> Geoff
>
> Geoff Goodman, Ph.D., ABPP, FIPA, CST, CSAT-S, CMAT-S, RPT-S
> Associate Professor
> Clinical Psychology Doctoral Program
> Long Island University
> 720 Northern Blvd.
> Brookville, NY 11548
> (516) 299-4277
> http://www.drgeoffgoodman.com
> http://www.rurallibrariesresearchnetwork.com
> ________________________________________
> From: list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org [list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org] on behalf of Nick Midgley [nickmidgley@btconnect.com]
> Sent: Tuesday, October 4, 2016 12:16 PM
> To: caftr@psychotherapyresearch.org
> Subject: RE: CaFTR Parent stress measures and parent-child relationship measures
>
> Thanks, Sue, for this query. It is too early for me to say from personal experience how good they are, but in a study we are running with children in foster care we are using the following:
>
> - The Parent Stress Index – Short Form (PSI-SF; Haskin et al., 2006) used to assess carer wellbeing and the carer-child relationship.
> - The Parenting Efficacy Scale (Woolgar et al., 2012), a measure of beliefs and confidence about parenting skills.
> - The Parenting Scale (Arnold et al., 2003), assesses parenting practices, including over-reactivity.
>
> I'd be interested to hear what other people have used, and what they've found most useful. Obviously depends on the population, age of children etc.
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Nick
>
>
>
> From: list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org [mailto:list-manager@psychotherapyresearch.org] On Behalf Of Kegerreis, Susan L
> Sent: Tuesday, September 27, 2016 8:55 PM
> To: caftr@psychotherapyresearch.org
> Subject: CaFTR Parent stress measures and parent-child relationship measures
>
> Dear members,
>
> I am seeking the best measures to use in evaluating a support service for parents with children with additional needs, particularly those with Autistic Spectrum Conditions.
>
> The research will be questionnaire based, so full family assessment tools will not be usable. We are seeking to explore parental and family stress and parent perceptions of/relationships with their children, before and after the intervention.
>
> What have others found to be the most useful and accessible?
>
> Many thanks for any suggestions.
>
> Sue Kegerreis
> Dear colleague, to unsubscribe please use the following URL: http://archives.simplelists.com
> Dear colleague, to unsubscribe please use the following URL: http://archives.simplelists.com
> Dear colleague, to unsubscribe please use the following URL:
>
> http://archives.simplelists.com
Dear colleague, to unsubscribe please use the following URL:
http://archives.simplelists.com
Dear colleague, to unsubscribe please use the following URL: http://www.simplelists.com/confirm.php?u=npnBPxTKVVUp6wQmwWbQio39Zwz1fjBv