Objective: To explore several key aspects of the diagnosis and assessment for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in infants and young children.
Method: Fifteen traumatized, clinic-referred children, and a comparison sample of 12 at-risk children, all younger than 48 months of age, were assessed with a standardized procedure and a semistructured diagnostic interview. The assessments were videotaped and reviewed by two blind raters for scoring DSM-IV PTSD criteria and an alternative set of PTSD criteria for young children. Raters were debriefed and consensus ratings were used to make best-estimate diagnoses.
Results: The investigation of procedural validity showed that 12% of the diagnostic criteria present in these children could be detected by a clinician through direct observation or interaction with the children. The remainder of criteria were apparent only through caregiver report. Problematic aspects of parental reporting were most evident for the avoidance/numbing of responsiveness criteria. The traumatized subjects showed significantly more alternative criteria of PTSD than DSM-IV criteria of PTSD. The main sources of rater disagreement are described.
Conclusions: Additional sources of information would complement the multidimensional assessment of PTSD in young children. The set of alternative criteria appears to show greater criterion validity than the DSM-IV criteria.