Table 5.
Clinician responses to anonymous survey about PCARES-Youth.
| % | % | % | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Item | N | Disagree | Neutral | Agree | χ2 |
|
| |||||
| I am familiar with the PCARES-Youth assessment project | 28 | 10.7% | 10.7% | 78.6% | 25.79* |
| I can interpret and understand the results of parent/caregiver ratings on the PCARES-Youth measures. | 28 | 21.4% | 7.1% | 71.4% | 19.14* |
| Parents/caregivers make positive comments about the PCARES-Youth measures. | 26 | 23.1% | 69.2% | 7.7% | 16.00* |
| Parents/caregivers make negative comments about the PCARES-Youth measures. | 26 | 11.5% | 57.7% | 30.8% | 8.39* |
| PCARES-Youth measures are usually completed by parents/caregivers and completed ratings are usually provided to you. | 25 | 12.0% | 20.0% | 68.0% | 13.76* |
| PCARES-Youth is helpful in my work with children, parents, or families | 26 | 19.2% | 30.8% | 50.0% | 3.77 |
| Overall, PCARES-Youth assessments are worth the time and effort they require from my patients and from me. | 27 | 22.2% | 22.2% | 55.6% | 6.00* |
Items were evaluated using Likert scales with the following anchors: strongly disagree (−2), disagree (−1), neutral (0), agree (1), strongly agree (2). % disagree = percent of respondents who endorsed “disagree” or “strongly disagree” response options; % neutral = percent of respondents who endorsed the “neutral response option”; % agreement = percent of respondents who endorsed “agree” or “strongly agree” response options.
= p < .05 in a one-sample chi-square test with two degrees of freedom.