The primary care PTSD screen (PC–PTSD): development and operating characteristics

Annabel Prins(San Jose State University), Paige Ouimette(Washington State University), Rachel Kimerling(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Rebecca P. Camerond(California State University, Sacramento), Daniela S. Hugelshofer(Washington State University), Jennifer Shaw-Hegwer(San Jose State University), Ann Thrailkill(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Fred D. Gusman(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Javaid I. Sheikh(VA Palo Alto Health Care System)
Primary Care Psychiatry
January 1, 2004
Cited by 1,405

Abstract

Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a frequently unrecognized anxiety disorder in primary care settings. This study reports on the development and operating characteristics of a brief 4-item screen for PTSD in primary care (PC-PTSD). 188 VA primary care patients completed the PC-PTSD, the PTSD Symptom Checklist (PCL) and the Clinician Administered Scale for PTSD (CAPS). The prevalence of PTSD was 24.5%. Signal detection analyses showed that with this base rate, the PC-PTSD had an optimally efficient cutoff score of 3 for both male and female patients. A cutoff score of 2 is recommended when sensitivity rather than efficiency is optimized. The PC-PTSD outperformed the PCL in terms of overall quality, sensitivity, specificity, efficiency, and quality of efficiency. The PC-PTSD appears to be a psychometrically sound screen for PTSD with comparable operating characteristtics to other screens for mental disorders.


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