The YOQ®-30 is a short form of the YOQ®-2.0. It was developed as a brief measure of severity of disturbance in mental health patients under 18 that can be used repeatedly and is sensitive to change. It provides a total score or global index of behavioral and emotional distress in a child/adolescent’s life. Critical items alert clinicians to potential high-risk behaviors (e.g. suicide, substance abuse). The instrument provides easy to use interpretive indices. A cut off score discriminates between the normal and dysfunctional range and a reliable change index is used to determine if the change during treatment is clinically significant. . The YOQ®-30 is available in English and Spanish. The YOQ has a broad normative sample and has been used extensively in research and clinical applications.
The YOQ®-30 is available in a parent rating version (staff members can complete the parent version in 24-hour care), which is appropriate for ages 4 through 17, and a self-report version, which is appropriate for ages 12 through 17. The question of whether a parent-report or a self-report measure is most appropriate for child and adolescent populations is not settled. Developmental considerations, such as verbal skills and reading ability, factors such as motivation for treatment, social desirability, and perception of the problem behavior or feelings (i.e. whether the child sees a particular symptom as problematic or his parents or teacher sees it as problematic), all influence the decision to use parent or self-report data with children. With children under 11 or 12, parent-report is the norm with the assumption being that parents will be the most reliable source for obtaining data about a young child’s functioning and behavior. In adolescents, research (Achenbach and Edelbroch, 1991) have shown that the major differences between parent and self-report are: 1) the tendency of adolescents to under-report their symptomatology as compared to parents and 2) the finding that parents are better sources of data regarding objective behaviors (e.g. oppositional attitude, school failures, etc) while adolescents themselves are considered more accurate informants regarding their subjective states (moods, feelings, etc).

The YOQ®-30 is designed to be used repeatedly and is sensitive to change in children and adolescents receiving mental health treatment. The YOQ®-30 provides easy to use interpretive indices that enable a clinician to quickly assess his/her client’s level of disturbance and adequacy of treatment response. A cutoff score discriminates between normal functioning and clinical disturbance. Also, a reliable change index (RCI) has been established so changes in patient scores can be evaluated to determine if they are clinically significant. Additionally, there are flags for clinical follow-up of critical items such as suicidality and drug/alcohol abuse.
The thirty items for the YOQ®-30 were chosen from the YOQ® 2.0 based on their individual sensitivity to change as estimated from a large-scale study of patients undergoing treatment in a variety of settings. The items that comprise the YOQ® 30 address commonly occurring problems and symptoms across a wide variety of disorders.
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