Should Clinicians Split or Lump Psychiatric Symptoms? The Structure of Psychopathology in Two Large Pediatric Clinical Samples from England and Norway
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15321Date
2017-12-14Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Fernández de la Cruz, Lorena; Vidal-Ribas, Pablo; Zahreddine, Nada; Mathiassen, Børge; Brøndbo, Per Håkan; Simonoff, Emily; Goodman, Robert; Stringaris, ArgyrisAbstract
It has been suggested that the structure of psychiatric phenomena can be reduced to a few symptom dimensions. These
proposals, mainly based on epidemiological samples, may not apply to clinical populations. We tested the structure of psychiatric symptoms across two pediatric clinical samples from England (N=8434) and Norway (N=5866). Confirmatory
factor analyses of the parent-reported Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) evaluated the relative fit of several
models, including a first-order model, a second-order model with the widely-established broad symptom dimensions of
internalizing-externalizing, and two bi-factor models capturing a general psychopathology factor. Predictive value of the
SDQ subscales for psychiatric disorders was examined. A first-order five-factor solution better fit the data. The expected
SDQ subscale(s) related best to the corresponding psychiatric diagnosis. In pediatric clinical samples, a granular approach
to psychiatric symptoms where several dimensions are considered seems to fit the data better than models based on lumping
symptoms into internalizing/externalizing dimensions.