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Journal Article

Citation

Mouthaan J, Sijbrandij M, Reitsma JB, Gersons BPR, Olff M. PLoS One 2014; 9(5): e97183.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, Centre for Anxiety Disorders, Research Group Psychotrauma, Academic Medical Centre, Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Arq Psychotrauma Expert Group, Diemen, The Netherlands.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Public Library of Science)

DOI

10.1371/journal.pone.0097183

PMID

24816642

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Following traumatic exposure, a proportion of trauma victims develops posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Early PTSD risk screening requires sensitive instruments to identify everyone at risk for developing PTSD in need of diagnostic follow-up. AIMS: This study compares the accuracy of the 4-item SPAN, 10-item Trauma Screening Questionnaire (TSQ) and 22-item Impact of Event Scale-Revised (IES-R) in predicting chronic PTSD at a minimum sensitivity of 80%.

METHOD: Injury patients admitted to a level-I trauma centre (Nā€Š=ā€Š311) completed the instruments at a median of 23 days and were clinically assessed for PTSD at 6 months. Areas under the curve and specificities at 80% sensitivity were compared between instruments.

RESULTS: Areas under the curve in all instruments were adequate (SPAN: 0.83; TSQ: 0.82; IES-R: 0.83) with no significant differences. At 80% sensitivity, specificities were 64% for SPAN, 59% for TSQ and 72% for IES-R.

CONCLUSION: The SPAN, TSQ and IES-R show similar accuracy in early detection of individuals at risk for PTSD, despite differences in number of items. The modest specificities and low positive predictive values found for all instruments could lead to relatively many false positive cases, when applied in clinical practice.


Language: en

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