The SDQ is a brief behavioural screening questionnaire about 3-16 year
olds. It exists in several versions to meet the needs of researchers,
clinicians and educationalists. Each version includes between one
and three of the following components:
|
| 1) emotional symptoms (5 items) | } | added together to generate a total difficulties score (based on 20 items) |
| 2) conduct problems (5 items) | ||
| 3) hyperactivity/inattention (5 items) | ||
| 4) peer relationship problems (5 items) | ||
| 5) prosocial behaviour (5 items) |
Several two-sided versions of the SDQ are available with the 25 items on
strengths and difficulties on the front of the page and an impact supplement
on the back. These extended versions of the SDQ ask whether the respondent
thinks the young person has a problem, and if so, enquire further about
chronicity, distress, social impairment, and burden to others. This
provides useful additional information for clinicians and researchers with
an interest in psychiatric caseness and the determinants of service use
(Goodman, 1999).
The follow-up versions of the SDQ include not only the 25 basic items and the impact question, but also two additional follow-up questions for use after an intervention. Has the intervention reduced problems? Has the intervention helped in other ways, e.g. making the problems more bearable? To increase the chance of detecting change, the follow-up versions of the SDQ ask about 'the last month', as opposed to 'the last six months or this school year', which is the reference period for the standard versions. Follow-up versions also omit the question about the chronicity of problems.
Last modified : 21/02/01