Psychiatric assessment of a child or adolescent includes
identifying the reasons for referral; assessing the nature and extent of the
child's psychological and behavioral difficulties; and determining family,
school, social, and developmental factors that may be influencing the child's
emotional well-being.
A comprehensive evaluation of a child is composed of interviews
with the parents, the child, and other family members; gathering information
regarding the child's current school functioning; and often, a standardized
assessment of the child's intellectual level and academic achievement. In some
cases, standardized measures of developmental level and neuropsychological
assessments are useful. Psychiatric evaluations of children are rarely initiated
by the child, so clinicians must obtain information from the family and the
school to understand the reasons for the evaluation. In some cases, the court or
a child protective service agency may initiate a psychiatric evaluation.
Children can be excellent informants about symptoms related to mood and inner
experiences, such as psychotic phenomena, sadness, fears, and anxiety, but they
often have difficulty with the chronology of symptoms and are sometimes reticent
about reporting behaviors that have gotten them into trouble. Very young
children often cannot articulate their experiences verbally and do better
showing their feelings and preoccupations in a play situation.
The first step in the comprehensive evaluation of a child or
adolescent is to obtain a full description of the current concerns and a history
of the child's previous psychiatric and medical problems. This is often done
with the parents for school-aged children, whereas adolescents may be seen alone
first, to get their perception of the situation. Direct interview and
observation of the child is usually next, followed by psychological testing,
when indicated.
Clinical interviews offer the most flexibility in understanding the
evolution of problems and in establishing the role of environmental factors and
life events, but they may not systematically cover all psychiatric diagnostic
categories. To increase the breadth of information generated, the clinician may
use semistructured interviews such as the Kiddie Schedule for
Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School-Age Children (K-SADS);
structured interviews such as the National Institute for
Mental Health Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children Version IV (NIMH
DISC-IV); and rating scales, such as the Child Behavior
Checklist and Connors Parent or Teacher Rating Scale
for ADHD.
It is not uncommon for interviews from different sources, such as
parents, teachers, and school counselors, to reflect different or even
contradictory information about a given child. When faced with conflictual
information, the clinician must determine whether apparent contradictions
actually reflect an accurate picture of the child in different settings. Once a
complete history is obtained from the parents, the child is examined, the
child's current functioning at home and at school is assessed, and psychological
testing is completed, the clinician can use all the available information to
make a best-estimate diagnosis and can then make recommendations.
Once clinical information is obtained about a given child or
adolescent, it is the clinician's task to determine whether criteria are met for
one or more psychiatric disorder according to the text revision of the 4th
edition of the Diagnostic and Statistic Manual of Mental
Disorders (DSM-IV-TR). This most current version is a categorical
classification reflecting the consensus on constellations of symptoms believed
to comprise discrete and valid psychiatric disorders. Psychiatric disorders are
defined by the DSM-IV-TR as a clinically significant set of symptoms that is
associated with impairment in one or more areas of functioning. Whereas clinical
situations requiring intervention do not always fall within the context of a
given psychiatric disorder, the importance of identifying psychiatric disorders
when they arise is to facilitate meaningful investigation of childhood
psychopathology.
Clinical Interviews
To conduct a useful interview with a child of any age, clinicians
must be familiar with normal development to place the child's responses in the
proper perspective. For example, a young child's discomfort on separation from a
parent and a school-age child's lack of clarity about the purpose of the
interview are both perfectly normal and should not be misconstrued as
psychiatric symptoms. Furthermore, behavior that is normal in a child at one
age, such as temper tantrums in a 2-year-old, takes on a different meaning, for
example, in a 17-year-old.
The interviewer's first task is to engage the child and develop a
rapport so that the child is comfortable. The interviewer should inquire about
the child's concept of the purpose of the interview and should ask what the
parents have told the child. If the child
appears to be confused about the reason for the interview, the examiner may opt to summarize the parents' concerns in a developmentally appropriate and supportive manner. During the interview with the child, the clinician seeks to learn about the child's relationships with family members and peers, academic achievement and peer relationships in school, and the child's pleasurable activities. An estimate of the child's cognitive functioning is a part of the mental status examination.
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appears to be confused about the reason for the interview, the examiner may opt to summarize the parents' concerns in a developmentally appropriate and supportive manner. During the interview with the child, the clinician seeks to learn about the child's relationships with family members and peers, academic achievement and peer relationships in school, and the child's pleasurable activities. An estimate of the child's cognitive functioning is a part of the mental status examination.
The extent of confidentiality in child assessment is correlated
with the age of the child. In most cases, almost all specific information can
appropriately be shared with the parents of a very young child, whereas privacy
and permission of an older child or adolescent are mandated before sharing
information with parents. School-age and older children are informed that if the
clinician becomes concerned that any child is dangerous to himself or herself or
to others, this information must be shared with parents and, at times,
additional adults. As part of a psychiatric assessment of a child of any age,
the clinician must determine whether that child is safe in his or her
environment and must develop an index of suspicion about whether the child is a
victim of abuse or neglect. Whenever there is a suspicion of child maltreatment,
the local child protective service agency must be notified.
Toward the end of the interview, the child may be asked in an
open-ended manner whether he or she would like to bring up anything else. Each
child should be complimented for his or her cooperation and thanked for
participating in the interview, and the interview should end on a positive
note.
Infants and Young Children
Assessments of infants usually begin with the parents present,
because very young children may be frightened by the interview situation; the
interview with the parents present also allows the clinician to assess the
parent–infant interaction. Infants may be referred for a variety of reasons,
including high levels of irritability, difficulty being consoled, eating
disturbances, poor weight gain, sleep disturbances, withdrawn behavior, lack of
engagement in play, and developmental delay. The clinician assesses areas of
functioning that include motor development, activity level, verbal
communication, ability to engage in play, problem-solving skills, adaptation to
daily routines, relationships, and social responsiveness.
The child's developmental level of functioning is determined by
combining observations made during the interview with standardized developmental
measures. Observations of play reveal a child's developmental level and reflect
the child's emotional state and preoccupations. The examiner can interact with
an infant age 18 months or younger in a playful manner by using such games as
peek-a-boo. Children between the ages of 18 months and 3 years can be observed
in a playroom. Children ages 2 years or older may exhibit symbolic play with
toys, revealing more in this mode than through conversation. The use of puppets
and dolls with children under 6 years of age is often an effective way to elicit
information, especially if questions are directed to the dolls, rather than to
the child.
School-Age Children
Some school-age children are at ease when conversing with an adult;
others are hampered by fear, anxiety, poor verbal skills, or oppositional
behavior. School-age children can usually tolerate a 45-minute session. The room
should be sufficiently spacious for the child to move around, but not so large
as to reduce intimate contact between the examiner and the child. Part of the
interview can be reserved for unstructured play, and various toys can be made
available to capture the child's interest and to elicit themes and feelings.
Children in lower grades may be more interested in the toys in the room, whereas
by the sixth grade, children may be more comfortable with the interview process
and less likely to show spontaneous play.
The initial part of the interview explores the child's
understanding of the reasons for the meeting. The clinician should confirm that
the interview was not set up because the child is “in trouble†or as a
punishment for “bad†behavior. Techniques that can facilitate disclosure of
feelings include asking the child to draw peers, family members, a house, or
anything else that comes to mind. The child can then be questioned about the
drawings. Children may be asked to reveal three wishes, to describe the best and
worst events of their lives, and to name a favorite person to be stranded with
on a desert island. Games such as Donald W. Winnicott's “squiggle,†in which
the examiner draws a curved line and then the child and the examiner take turns
continuing the drawing, may facilitate conversation.
Questions that are partially open-ended with some multiple choices
may elicit the most complete answers from school-age children. Simple, closed
(yes or no) questions may not elicit sufficient information, and completely
open-ended questions can overwhelm a school-age child who cannot construct a
chronological narrative. These techniques often result in a shoulder shrug from
the child. The use of indirect commentary—such as, “I once knew a child who
felt very sad when he moved away from all his friendsâ€â€”is helpful, although
the clinician must be careful not to lead the child into confirming what the
child thinks the clinician wants to hear. School-age children respond well to
clinicians who help them compare moods or feelings by asking them to rate
feelings on a scale of 1 to 10.
Adolescents
Adolescents usually have distinct ideas about why the evaluation
was initiated, and can usually give a chronological account of the recent events
leading to the evaluation, although some may disagree with the need for the
evaluation. The clinician should clearly communicate the value of hearing the
story from an adolescent's point of view and must be careful to reserve judgment
and not assign blame. Adolescents may be concerned about confidentiality, and
clinicians can assure them that permission will be requested from them before
any specific information is shared with parents, except situations involving
danger to the adolescent or others, in which case confidentiality must be
sacrificed. Adolescents can be approached in an open-ended manner; however, when
silences occur during the interview, the clinician should attempt to reengage
the patient. Clinicians can explore what the adolescent believes the outcome of
the evaluation will be (change of school, hospitalization, removal from home,
removal of privileges).
Some adolescents approach the interview with apprehension or
hostility, but open up when it becomes evident that the clinician is neither
punitive nor judgmental. Clinicians must be aware of their own responses to
adolescents' behavior
(countertransference) and stay focused on the therapeutic process even in the face of defiant, angry, or difficult teenagers. Clinicians should set appropriate limits and should postpone or discontinue an interview if they feel threatened or if patients become destructive to property or engage in self-injurious behavior. Every interview should include an exploration of suicidal thoughts, assaultive behavior, psychotic symptoms, substance use, and knowledge of safe sexual practices along with a sexual history. Once rapport has been established, many adolescents appreciate the opportunity to tell their side of the story and may reveal things that they have not disclosed to anyone else.
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(countertransference) and stay focused on the therapeutic process even in the face of defiant, angry, or difficult teenagers. Clinicians should set appropriate limits and should postpone or discontinue an interview if they feel threatened or if patients become destructive to property or engage in self-injurious behavior. Every interview should include an exploration of suicidal thoughts, assaultive behavior, psychotic symptoms, substance use, and knowledge of safe sexual practices along with a sexual history. Once rapport has been established, many adolescents appreciate the opportunity to tell their side of the story and may reveal things that they have not disclosed to anyone else.
Family Interview
An interview with parents and the patient may take place first or
may occur later in the evaluation. Sometimes, an interview with the entire
family, including siblings, can be enlightening. The purpose is to observe the
attitudes and behavior of the parents toward the patient and the responses of
the children to their parents. The clinician's job is to maintain a
nonthreatening atmosphere in which each member of the family can speak freely
without feeling that the clinician is taking sides with any particular member.
Although child psychiatrists generally function as advocates for the child, the
clinician must validate each family member's feelings in this setting, because
lack of communication often contributes to the patient's problems.
Parents
The interview with the patient's parents or caretakers is necessary
to get a chronological picture of the child's growth and development. A thorough
developmental history and details of any stressors or important events that have
influenced the child's development must be elicited. The parents' view of the
family dynamics, their marital history, and their own emotional adjustment are
also elicited. The family's psychiatric history and the upbringing of the
parents are pertinent. Parents are usually the best informants about the child's
early development and previous psychiatric and medical illnesses. They may be
better able to provide an accurate chronology of past evaluations and treatment.
In some cases, especially with older children and adolescents, the parents may
be unaware of significant current symptoms or social difficulties of the child.
Clinicians elicit the parents' formulation of the causes and nature of their
child's problems and ask about expectations about the current
assessment.
Diagnostic Instruments
The two main types of diagnostic instruments used by clinicians and
researchers are diagnostic interviews and questionnaires. Diagnostic interviews
are administered to either children or their parents and are often designed to
elicit sufficient information on numerous aspects of functioning to determine
whether criteria are met from the DSM-IV-TR.
Semistructured interviews, or “interviewer-based†interviews,
such as K-SADS and the Child and Adolescent Psychiatric
Assessment (CAPA) serve as guides for the clinician. They help the
clinician clarify answers to questions about symptoms. Structured interviews, or
“respondent-based†interviews, such as NIMH DISC-IV, the Children's Interview for Psychiatric Syndromes (ChIPS), and
the Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents
(DICA), basically provide a script for the interviewer without interpretation of
the subject's responses. Two other diagnostic instruments use pictures, the
Dominic-R and the Pictorial
Instrument for Children and Adolescents (PICA-III-R). These instruments
use pictures as cues, along with an accompanying question to elicit information
about symptoms, especially for young children as well as for adolescents.
Diagnostic instruments aid the collection of information in a
systematic way. Diagnostic instruments, even the most comprehensive, however,
cannot replace clinical interviews, because clinical interviews are superior in
understanding the chronology of symptoms, the interplay between environmental
stressors and emotional responses, and developmental issues. Clinicians often
find it helpful to combine the data from diagnostic instruments with clinical
material gathered in a comprehensive evaluation.
Questionnaires can cover a broad range of symptom areas, such as
the Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist, or they can be
focused on a particular type of symptomatology and are often called rating
scales, such as the Connors Parent Rating Scale for
ADHD.
Semistructured Diagnostic Interviews
Kiddie Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for
School-Age Children
The K-SADS can be used for children from 6 years to 18 years of
age. It presents multiple items with some space for further clarification of
symptoms. It elicits information on current diagnosis and on symptoms present in
the previous year. Another version can also ascertain lifetime diagnoses. It
assesses diagnoses according to DSM-IV-TR. This instrument has been used
extensively, especially in evaluation of mood disorders, and includes measures
of impairment caused by symptoms. The schedule comes in a form for parents to
give information about their child and in a version for use directly with the
child. The schedule takes about 1 to 1.5 hours to administer. The interviewer
should have some training in the field of child psychiatry, but need not be a
psychiatrist.
Child and Adolescent Psychiatric Assessment
The CAPA is an “interviewer-based†instrument that can be used
for children from 9 to 17 years of age. It comes in modular form so that certain
diagnostic entities can be administered without having to give the entire
interview. It covers disruptive behavior disorders, mood disorders, anxiety
disorders, eating disorders, sleep disorders, elimination disorders, substance
use disorders, tic disorders, schizophrenia, posttraumatic stress disorder, and
somatization symptoms. It focuses on the 3 months before the interview, called
the “primary period.†In general, it takes about 1 hour to administer. It
has a glossary to aid in decision-making regarding symptoms and provides
separate ratings of presence and severity of symptoms. It can be used to
determine diagnoses according to the fourth edition of DSM (DSM-IV), the revised
third edition of DSM (DSM-III-R), or the tenth revision of International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related
Health Problems (ICD-10). Training is necessary to administer this
interview, and the interviewer must be prepared to use some clinical judgment in
interpreting elicited symptoms.
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Structured Diagnostic Interviews
National Institute of Mental Health Interview Schedule for
Children Version IV
The NIMH DISC-IV is a highly structured interview designed to
assess more than 30 DSM-IV diagnostic entities administered by trained
“laypersons.†It is available in parallel child and parent forms. The parent
form can be used for children from 6 to 17 years of age, and the direct child
form of the instrument was designed for children from 9 to 17 years of age. It
is applicable for a multitude of diagnoses keyed to DSM-IV-TR. A computer
scoring algorithm is available. This instrument assesses the presence of
diagnoses that have been present within the last 4 weeks, and also within the
last year. Because it is a fully structured interview, the instructions serve as
a complete guide for the questions, and the examiner need not have any knowledge
of child psychiatry to administer the interview correctly.
Children's Interview for Psychiatric Syndromes
The ChIPS is a highly structured interview designed for use by
trained interviewers with children from 6 to 18 years of age. It is composed of
15 sections, and it elicits information on psychiatric symptoms as well as
psychosocial stressors targeting 20 psychiatric disorders, according to DSM-IV
criteria. There are parent and child forms. It takes approximately 40 minutes to
administer the ChIPS. Diagnoses covered include depression, mania,
attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), separation disorder,
obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), conduct disorder, substance use disorder,
anorexia, and bulimia. The ChIPS was designed for use as a screening instrument
for clinicians and a diagnostic instrument for clinical and epidemiological
research.
Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents
The current version of the DICA was developed in 1997 to assess
information resulting in diagnoses according to either DSM-IV or DSM-III-R.
Although it was originally designed to be a highly structured interview, it can
now be used in a semistructured format. This means that, although interviewers
are allowed to use additional questions and probes to clarify elicited
information, the method of probing is standardized so that all interviewers will
follow a specific pattern. When using the interview with younger children, more
flexibility is built in, allowing interviewers to deviate from written questions
to ensure that the child understands the question. Parent and child interviews
are expected to be used. It covers children 6 to 17 years of age and generally
takes 1 to 2 hours to administer. It covers externalizing behavior disorders,
anxiety disorders, depressive disorders, and substance abuse disorders, among
others.
Pictorial Diagnostic Instruments
Dominic-R
The Dominic-R is a pictorial, fully structured interview designed
to elicit psychiatric symptoms from children 6 to 11 years of age. The pictures
illustrate abstract emotional and behavioral content of diagnostic entities
according to DSM-III-R. The instrument uses a picture of a child called
“Dominic†who is experiencing the symptom in question. Some symptoms have
more than one picture, with a brief story that is read to the child. Along with
each picture is a sentence asking about the situation being shown and asking the
child if he or she has experiences similar to the one that Dominic is having.
Diagnostic entities covered by the Dominic-R include separation anxiety,
generalized anxiety, depression and dysthymia, ADHD, oppositional defiant
disorder, conduct disorder, and specific phobia. Although symptoms of the above
diagnoses can be fully elicited from the Dominic-R, no specific provision within
the instrument inquires about frequency of the symptom, duration, or age of
onset. The paper version of this interview takes about 20 minutes, and the
computerized version of this instrument takes about 15 minutes. Trained
lay-interviewers can administer this interview. Computerized versions of this
interview are available with pictures of a child who is white, black, Latino, or
Asian.
Pictorial Instrument for Children and Adolescents
PICA-III-R is composed of 137 pictures organized in modules and
designed to cover five diagnostic categories, including disorders of anxiety,
mood, psychosis, disruptive disorders, and substance use disorder. It is
designed to be administered by clinicians and can be used for children and
adolescents ranging from 6 to 16 years of age. It provides a categorical
(diagnosis present or absent) and a dimensional (range of severity) assessment.
This instrument presents pictures of a child experiencing emotional, behavioral,
and cognitive symptoms. The child is asked, “How much are you like him/her?â€
and a five-point rating scale with pictures of a person with open arms in
increasing degrees is shown to the child to help him or her identify the
severity of the symptoms. It takes about 40 minutes to 1 hour to administer the
interview. This instrument is currently keyed to DSM-III-R. It can be used to
aid in clinical interviews and in research diagnostic
protocols.
Questionnaires and Rating Scales
Achenbach Child Behavior Checklist
The parent and teacher versions of the Achenbach
Child Behavior Checklist were developed to cover a broad range of
symptoms and several positive attributes related to academic and social
competence. The checklist presents items related to mood, frustration tolerance,
hyperactivity, oppositional behavior, anxiety, and various other behaviors. The
parent version consists of 118 items to be rated 0 (not true), 1 (sometimes
true), or 2 (very true). The teacher version is similar, but without the items
that apply only to home life. Profiles were developed based on normal children
of three different age groups (4 to 5, 6 to 11, and 12 to 16).
Such a checklist identifies specific problem areas that might
otherwise be overlooked, and it may point out areas in which the child's
behavior deviates from that of normal children of the same age group. The
checklist is not used specifically to make diagnoses.
Revised Achenbach Behavior Problem Checklist
Consisting of 150 items that cover a variety of childhood
behavioral and emotional symptoms, the Revised Achenbach
Behavior Problem Checklist discriminates between clinic-referred and
nonreferred children. Separate subscales have been found to correlate in the
appropriate direction with other measures of intelligence, academic achievement,
clinical observations, and
peer popularity. As with the other broad rating scales, this instrument can help elicit a comprehensive view of a multitude of behavioral areas, but it is not designed to make psychiatric diagnoses.
P.1131
peer popularity. As with the other broad rating scales, this instrument can help elicit a comprehensive view of a multitude of behavioral areas, but it is not designed to make psychiatric diagnoses.
Connors Abbreviated Parent-Teacher Rating Scale for ADHD
In its original form, the Connors Abbreviated
Parent-Teacher Rating Scale for ADHD consisted of 93 items rated on a 0
to 3 scale and was subgrouped into 25 clusters, including problems with
restlessness, temper, school, stealing, eating, and sleeping. Over the years,
multiple versions of this scale were developed and used to aid in systematic
identification of children with ADHD. A highly abbreviated form of this rating
scale, the Connors Abbreviated Parent-Teacher
Questionnaire, was developed for use with both parents and teachers by
Keith Connors in 1973. It consists of ten items that assess both hyperactivity
and inattention.
Brief Impairment Scale
A newly validated 23-item instrument suitable to obtain information
on children ranging from 4 years to 17 years, the Brief
Impairment Scale (BIS) evaluates three domains of functioning:
interpersonal relations, school/work functioning, and care/self-fulfillment.
This scale is administered to an adult informant about his or her child, does
not take long to administer, and provides a global measure of impairment along
the above three dimensions. This scale cannot be used to make clinical decisions
on individual patients, but it can provide information on the degree of
impairment that a given child is experiencing in a certain
area.
Components of the Child Psychiatric Evaluation
Psychiatric evaluation of a child includes a description of the
reason for the referral, the child's past and present functioning, and any test
results. An outline of the evaluation is given in Table
37-1.
Identifying Data
To understand the clinical problems to be evaluated, the clinician
must first identify the patient and keep in mind the family constellation
surrounding the child. The clinician must also pay attention to the source of
the referral—that is, whether it is the child's family, school, or another
agency—because this influences the family's attitude toward the evaluation.
Finally, many informants contribute to the child's evaluation, and each must be
identified to gain insight into the child's functioning in different
settings.
History
A comprehensive history contains information about the child's
current and past functioning, from the child's report, from clinical and
structured interviews with the parents, and from information from teachers and
previous treating clinicians. The chief complaint and the history of the present
illness are generally obtained from both the child and the parents. Naturally,
the child will articulate the situation according to his or her developmental
level. The developmental history is more accurately obtained from the parents.
Psychiatric and medical histories, current physical examination findings, and
immunization histories can be augmented with reports from psychiatrists and
pediatricians who have treated the child in the past. The child's report is
critical in understanding the current situation regarding peer relationships and
adjustment to school. Adolescents are the best informants regarding knowledge of
safe sexual practices, drug or alcohol use, and suicidal ideation. The family's
psychiatric and social histories, and family function are best obtained from the
parents.
|
Table 37-1 Child Psychiatric
Evaluation
| ||
|---|---|---|
|
Mental Status Examination
A detailed description of the child's current mental functioning
can be obtained through observation and specific questioning. An outline of the
mental status examination is presented in Table 37-2.
Table 37-3 lists components of a comprehensive
neuropsychiatry mental status.
|
Table 37-2 Mental Status Examination for
Children
| |
|---|---|
|
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|
Table 37-3 Neuropsychiatric Mental Status
Examination*
| ||
|---|---|---|
|
Physical Appearances
The examiner should document the child's size, grooming,
nutritional state, bruising, head circumference, physical signs of anxiety,
facial expressions, and mannerisms.
Parent–Child Interaction
The examiner can observe the interactions between parents and child
in the waiting area before the interview and in the family session. The manner
in which parents and child converse and the emotional overtones are
pertinent.
Separation and Reunion
The examiner should note both the manner in which the child
responds to the separation from a parent for an individual interview and the
reunion behavior. Either lack of affect at separation and reunion or severe
distress on separation or reunion can indicate problems in the parent–child
relationship or other psychiatric disturbances.
Orientation to Time, Place, and Persons
Impairments in orientation can reflect organic damage, low
intelligence, or a thought disorder. The age of the child must be kept in mind,
however, because very young children are not expected to know the date, other
chronological information, or the name of the interview site.
Speech and Language
The examiner should evaluate the child's speech and language
acquisition. Is it appropriate for the child's age? A disparity between
expressive language usage and receptive language is notable. The examiner should
also note the child's rate of speech, rhythm, latency to answer, spontaneity of
speech, intonation, articulation of words, and prosody. Echolalia, repetitive
stereotypical phrases, and unusual syntax are important psychiatric findings.
Children who do not use words by age 18 months or who do not use phrases by age
2.5 to 3 years, but who have a history of normal babbling and responding
appropriately to nonverbal cues, are probably developing normally. The examiner
should consider the possibility that a hearing loss is contributing to a speech
and language deficit.
Mood
A child's sad expression, lack of appropriate smiling, tearfulness,
anxiety, euphoria, and anger are valid indicators of mood, as are verbal
admissions of feelings. Persistent themes in play and fantasy also reflect the
child's mood.
Affect
The examiner should note the child's range of emotional
expressivity, appropriateness of affect to thought content, ability to move
smoothly from one affect to another, and sudden labile emotional
shifts.
Thought Process and Content
In evaluating a thought disorder in a child, the clinician must
always consider what is developmentally expected for the child's age and what is
deviant for any age group. The evaluation of thought form considers loosening of
associations, excessive magical thinking, perseveration, echolalia, the ability
to distinguish fantasy from reality, sentence coherence, and the ability to
reason logically. The evaluation of thought content considers delusions,
obsessions, themes, fears, wishes, preoccupations, and interests.
Suicidal ideation is always a part of the mental status examination
for children who are sufficiently verbal to understand the
questions and old enough to understand the concept. Children of average intelligence more than 4 years of age usually have some understanding of what is real and what is make-believe and may be asked about suicidal ideation, although a firm concept of the permanence of death may not be present until several years later.
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questions and old enough to understand the concept. Children of average intelligence more than 4 years of age usually have some understanding of what is real and what is make-believe and may be asked about suicidal ideation, although a firm concept of the permanence of death may not be present until several years later.
Aggressive thoughts and homicidal ideation are assessed here.
Perceptual disturbances, such as hallucinations, are also assessed. Very young
children are expected to have short attention spans and may change the topic and
conversation abruptly without exhibiting a symptomatic flight of ideas.
Transient visual and auditory hallucinations in very young children do not
necessarily represent major psychotic illnesses, but they do deserve further
investigation.
Social Relatedness
The examiner assesses the appropriateness of the child's response
to the interviewer, general level of social skills, eye contact, and degree of
familiarity or withdrawal in the interview process. Overly friendly or familiar
behavior may be as troublesome as are extremely retiring and withdrawn
responses. The examiner assesses the child's self-esteem, general and specific
areas of confidence, and success with family and peer relationships.
Motor Behavior
The motor behavior part of the mental status examination includes
observations of the child's coordination and activity level and ability to pay
attention and carry out developmentally appropriate tasks. It also involves
involuntary movements, tremors, motor hyperactivity, and any unusual focal
asymmetries of muscle movement.
Cognition
The examiner assesses the child's intellectual functioning and
problem-solving abilities. An approximate level of intelligence can be estimated
by the child's general information, vocabulary, and comprehension. For a
specific assessment of the child's cognitive abilities, the examiner can use a
standardized test.
Memory
School-age children should be able to remember three objects after
5 minutes and to repeat five digits forward and three digits backward. Anxiety
can interfere with the child's performance, but an obvious inability to repeat
digits or to add simple numbers may reflect brain damage, mental retardation, or
learning disabilities.
Judgment and Insight
The child's view of the problems, reactions to them, and suggested
solutions may give the clinician a good idea of the child's judgment and
insight. In addition, the child's understanding of what he or she can
realistically do to help and what the clinician can do adds to the assessment of
the child's judgment.
Neuropsychiatric Assessment
A neuropsychiatric assessment is appropriate for children who are
suspected of having a neurological disorder, a psychiatric impairment that
coexists with neurological signs, or psychiatric symptoms that may be caused by
neuropathology. The neuropsychiatric evaluation combines information from
neurological, physical, and mental status examinations. The neurological
examination can identify asymmetrical abnormal signs (hard signs) that may
indicate lesions in the brain. A physical examination can evaluate the presence
of physical stigmata of particular syndromes in which neuropsychiatric symptoms
or developmental aberrations play a role (e.g., fetal alcohol syndrome, Down
syndrome).
An important part of the neuropsychiatric examination is the
assessment of neurological soft signs and minor physical anomalies. The term
neurological soft signs was first noted by Loretta
Bender in the 1940s in reference to nondiagnostic abnormalities in the
neurological examinations of children with schizophrenia. Soft signs do not
indicate focal neurological disorders, but they are associated with a wide
variety of developmental disabilities and occur frequently in children with low
intelligence, learning disabilities, and behavioral disturbances. Soft signs may
refer to both behavioral symptoms (which are sometimes associated with brain
damage, such as severe impulsivity and hyperactivity), physical findings
(including contralateral overflow movements), and a variety of nonfocal signs
(e.g., mild choreiform movements, poor balance, mild incoordination, asymmetry
of gait, nystagmus, and the persistence of infantile reflexes). Soft signs can
be divided into those that are normal in a young child, but become abnormal when
they persist in an older child, and those that are abnormal at any age. The
Physical and Neurological Examination for Soft Signs
(PANESS) is an instrument used with children up to the age of 15 years. It
consists of 15 questions about general physical status and medical history and
43 physical tasks (e.g., touch your finger to your nose, hop on one foot to the
end of the line, tap quickly with your finger). Neurological soft signs are
important to note, but they are not useful in making a specific psychiatric
diagnosis.
Minor physical anomalies or dysmorphic features occur with a higher
than usual frequency in children with developmental disabilities, learning
disabilities, speech and language disorders, and hyperactivity. As with soft
signs, the documentation of minor physical anomalies is part of the
neuropsychiatric assessment, but it is rarely helpful in the diagnostic process
and does not imply a good or bad prognosis. Minor physical anomalies include a
high-arched palate, epicanthal folds, hypertelorism, low-set ears, transverse
palmar creases, multiple hair whorls, a large head, a furrowed tongue, and
partial syndactyl of several toes.
When a seizure disorder is being considered in the differential
diagnosis or a structural abnormality in the brain is suspected, an
electroencephalogram (EEG), computed tomography (CT), or magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI) may be indicated.
Developmental, Psychological, and Educational Testing
Psychological tests are not always required to assess psychiatric
symptoms, but they are valuable in determining a child's developmental level,
intellectual functioning, and academic difficulties. A measure of adaptive
functioning (including the child's competence in communication, daily living
skills, socialization, and motor skills) is a prerequisite when a diagnosis of
mental retardation is being considered. Table 37-4
outlines the general categories of psychological tests.
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Table 37-4 Commonly Used Child and Adolescent
Psychological Assessment Instruments
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Development Tests for Infants and Preschoolers
The Gesell Infant Scale, the Cattell Infant Intelligence Scale, Bayley
Scales of Infant Development, and the Denver
Developmental Screening Test include developmental assessments of infants
as young as 2 months of age. When used with very young infants, the tests focus
on sensorimotor and social responses to a variety of objects and interactions.
When these instruments are used with older infants and preschoolers, emphasis is
placed on language acquisition. The Gesell Infant
Scale measures development in four areas: motor, adaptive functioning,
language, and social.
An infant's score on one of these developmental assessments is not
a reliable way to predict a child's future intelligence quotient (IQ) in most
cases. Infant assessments are valuable,
however, in detecting developmental deviation and mental retardation and in raising suspicions of a developmental disorder. Whereas infant assessments rely heavily on sensorimotor functions, intelligence testing in older children and adolescents includes later-developing functions, including verbal, social, and abstract cognitive abilities.
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however, in detecting developmental deviation and mental retardation and in raising suspicions of a developmental disorder. Whereas infant assessments rely heavily on sensorimotor functions, intelligence testing in older children and adolescents includes later-developing functions, including verbal, social, and abstract cognitive abilities.
Intelligence Tests for School-Age Children and Adolescents
The most widely used test of intelligence for school-age children
and adolescents is the third edition of the Wechsler
Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC-III-R). It can be given to children
from 6 to 17 years of age and yields a verbal IQ, a performance IQ, and a
combined full-scale IQ. The verbal subtests consist of vocabulary, information,
arithmetic, similarities, comprehension, and digit span (supplemental)
categories. The performance subtests include block design, picture completion,
picture arrangement, object assembly, coding, mazes (supplemental), and symbol
search (supplemental). The scores of the supplemental subtests are not included
in the computation of IQ.
Each subcategory is scored from 1 to 19, with 10 being the average
score. An average full-scale IQ is 100; 70 to 80 represents borderline
intellectual function; 80 to 90 is in the low average range; 90 to 109 is
average; 110 to 119 is high average; and above 120 is in the superior or very
superior range. The multiple breakdowns of the performance and verbal subscales
allow great flexibility in identifying specific areas of deficit and scatter in
intellectual abilities. Because a large part of intelligence testing measures
abilities used in academic settings, the breakdown of the WISC-III-R can also be
helpful in pointing out skills in which a child is weak and may benefit from
remedial education.
The Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
covers an age range from 2 to 24 years. It relies on pictures, drawings, and
objects for very young children and on verbal performance for older children and
adolescents. This intelligence scale, the earliest version of an intelligence
test of its kind, leads to a mental age score as well as an intelligence
quotient.
The McCarthy Scales of Children's
Abilities and the Kaufman Assessment Battery for
Children are two other intelligence tests that are available for
preschool and school-age children. They do not cover the adolescent age
group.
Long-Term Stability of Intelligence
Although a child's intelligence is relatively stable throughout the
school-age years and adolescence, some factors can influence intelligence and a
child's score on an intelligence test. The intellectual functions of children
with severe mental illnesses and of those from low socioeconomic levels may
decrease over time, whereas the IQs of children whose environments have been
enriched may increase over time. Factors that influence a child's score on a
given test of intellectual functioning and, thus, affect the accuracy of the
test are motivation, emotional state, anxiety, and cultural
milieu.
Perceptual and Perceptual Motor Tests
The Bender Visual Motor Gestalt Test can
be given to children between the ages of 4 and 12 years. The test consists of a
set of spatially related figures that the child is asked to copy. The scores are
based on the number of errors. Although not a diagnostic test, it is useful in
identifying developmentally age-inappropriate perceptual
performances.
Personality Tests
Personality tests are not of much use in making diagnoses, and they
are less satisfactory than intelligence tests in regard to norms, reliability,
and validity, but they can be helpful in eliciting themes and fantasies.
The Rorschach test is a projective technique in which ambiguous
stimuli—a set of bilaterally symmetrical inkblots—are shown to a child, who
is then asked to describe what he or she sees in each. The hypothesis is that
the child's interpretation of the vague stimuli reflects basic characteristics
of personality. The examiner notes the themes and patterns. Two sets of norms
have been established for the Rorschach test, one for children between 2 and 10
years and one for adolescents between 10 and 17 years.
A more structured projective test is the Children's Apperception Test (CAT), which is an adaptation
of the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT). The CAT
consists of cards with pictures of animals in scenes that are somewhat
ambiguous, but are related to parent–child and sibling issues, caretaking, and
other relationships. The child is asked to describe what is happening and to
tell a story about the scene. Animals are used because it was hypothesized that
children might respond more readily to animal images than to human
figures.
Drawings, toys, and play are also applications of projective
techniques that can be used during the evaluation of children. Dollhouses,
dolls, and puppets have been especially helpful in allowing a child a
nonconversational mode in which to express a variety of attitudes and feelings.
Play materials that reflect household situations are likely to elicit a child's
fears, hopes, and conflicts about the family.
Projective techniques have not fared well as standardized
instruments. Rather than being considered tests, projective techniques are best
considered as additional clinical modalities.
Educational Tests
Achievement tests measure the attainment of knowledge and skills in
a particular academic curriculum. The Wide-Range Achievement
Test-Revised (WRAT-R) consists of tests of knowledge and skills and timed
performances of reading, spelling, and mathematics. It is used with children
from 5 years of age to adulthood. The test yields a score that is compared with
the average expected score for the child's chronological age and grade
level.
The Peabody Individual Achievement Test
(PIAT) includes word identification, spelling, mathematics, and reading
comprehension.
The Kaufman Test of Educational
Achievement, the Gray Oral Reading Test-Revised
(GORT-R), and the Sequential Tests of Educational
Progress (STEP) are achievement tests that determine whether a child has
achieved the educational level expected for his or her grade level. Children
with an average IQ, whose achievement is significantly lower than expected for
their grade level in one or more subjects, are considered to be learning
disabled. Thus, achievement testing, combined with a measure of intellectual
function, can identify specific learning disabilities for which remediation is
recommended. Children who do not reach their grade level according to their
chronological age, but who function intellectually in the borderline range or
lower, are not necessarily learning disabled unless a disparity exists between
their IQs and their levels of achievement.
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Biopsychosocial Formulation
The clinician's task is to integrate all of the information
obtained into a formulation that takes into account the biological
predisposition, psychodynamic factors, environmental stressors, and life events
that have led to the child's current level of functioning. Psychiatric disorders
and any specific physical, neuromotor, or developmental abnormalities must be
considered in the formulation of etiologic factors for current impairment. The
clinician's conclusions are an integration of clinical information along with
data from standardized psychological and developmental assessments. The
psychiatric formulation includes an assessment of family function as well as the
appropriateness of the child's educational setting. A determination of the
child's overall safety in his or her current situation is made. Any suspected
maltreatment must be reported to the local child protective service agency. The
child's overall well-being regarding growth, development, and academic and play
activities is considered.
Diagnosis
Current evidence suggests that the use of structured and
semistructured (evidence-based) assessment tools enhance a clinician's ability
to make the most accurate diagnoses. These instruments, described earlier,
include the K-SADS, the CAPA, and the NIMH DISC-IV interviews. The advantages of
including an evidence-based instrument in the diagnostic process include
decreasing potential clinician bias to make a diagnosis without all of the
necessary symptoms information, and serving as guides for the clinician to
consider each symptom that could contribute to a given diagnosis. These data can
enable the clinician to optimize his expertise to make challenging judgments
regarding child and adolescent disorders which may possess overlapping symptoms.
The clinician's ultimate task includes making all appropriate diagnoses
according to DSM-IV-TR. Some clinical situations do not fulfill criteria for
DSM-IV-TR diagnoses, but cause impairment and require psychiatric attention and
intervention. Clinicians who evaluate children are frequently in the position of
determining the impact of behavior of family members on the child's well-being.
In many cases, a child's level of impairment is related to factors extending
beyond a psychiatric diagnosis, such as the child's adjustment to his or her
family life, peer relationships, and educational placement.
Recommendations and Treatment Plan
The recommendations for treatment are derived by a clinician who
integrates the data gathered during the evaluation into a coherent formulation
of the factors that are contributing to the child's current problems, the
consequences of the problems, and strategies that may ameliorate the
difficulties. The recommendations can be broken down into their biological,
psychological, and social components. That is, identification of a biological
predisposition to a particular psychiatric disorder may be clinically relevant
to inform a psychopharmacologic recommendation. As part of the formulation, an
understanding of the psychodynamic interactions between family members may lead
a clinician to recommend treatment that includes a family component. Educational
and academic problems are addressed in the formulation and may lead to a
recommendation to seek a more effective academic placement. The overall social
situation of the child or adolescent is taken into account when recommendations
for treatment are developed. Of course, the physical and emotional safety of a
child or adolescent is of the utmost importance and always at the top of the
list of recommendations.
The child or adolescent's family, school life, peer interactions,
and social activities often have a direct impact on the child's success in
overcoming his or her difficulties. The psychological education and cooperation
of a child or adolescent's family are essential ingredients in successful
application of treatment recommendations. Communications from clinicians to
parents and family members that balance the observed positive qualities of the
child and family with the weak areas are often perceived as more helpful than a
focus only on the problem areas. Finally, the most successful treatment plans
are those developed cooperatively between the clinician, child, and family
members during which each member of the team perceives that he or she has been
given credit for positive contributions.
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