A French study of the Dominic Interactive

The Dominic Interactive was developed in North America to assess a child's perception of her/his own symptoms, which is critical to balance parents' and school professionals' perception. It is a computerized, DSM-IV-based pictorial questionnaire akin to a video game, for children aged...

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Veröffentlicht in:Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology 2002-09, Vol.37 (9), p.441-448
Hauptverfasser: VALLA, J. P, KOVESS, V, CHAN CHEE, C, BERTHIAUME, C, VANTALON, V, PIQUET, C, GRAS-VINCENDON, A, MARTIN, C, ALLES-JARDEL, M
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container_end_page 448
container_issue 9
container_start_page 441
container_title Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
container_volume 37
creator VALLA, J. P
KOVESS, V
CHAN CHEE, C
BERTHIAUME, C
VANTALON, V
PIQUET, C
GRAS-VINCENDON, A
MARTIN, C
ALLES-JARDEL, M
description The Dominic Interactive was developed in North America to assess a child's perception of her/his own symptoms, which is critical to balance parents' and school professionals' perception. It is a computerized, DSM-IV-based pictorial questionnaire akin to a video game, for children aged 6-11. A strengths and competencies scale displays positive situations. Most children complete the Dominic Interactive 90 situations within 10-15 min. Because of the cultural differences between North American and French children, a study of the appropriateness of the instrument to assess French children was required. The CD-ROM-based Dominic Interactive was completed by 253 community children, and by 150 children from outpatient clinics in four French cities. The latter also received clinical diagnoses. Prevalence estimates yielded by the Dominic Interactive in the general population and referred children, relationships between prevalence estimates based on the Dominic Interactive and clinical judgments, and differences between Dominic Interactive scores in sub-samples of children with and without a clinical diagnosis were studied. Significant differences between clinically referred and non-referred children were found for every diagnosis, and between Dominic Interactive scores of referred children with and without a clinical diagnosis with the exception of oppositional disorder. Parental acceptability of the instrument was never a problem, children like it, and clinicians' comments were positive. Reference and clinical judgment both indicate that the Dominic Interactive is appropriate to assess child mental health in France. Clinical judgment discrepancies between sites and small numbers are the limitations of this study. The instrument performed well in the French context. The potential advantages of using the Dominic Interactive (children enjoy the activity, parents approve of it, it is relatively cost-effective, etc.) suggest its applicability in other settings.
doi_str_mv 10.1007/s00127-002-0575-2
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subjects Biological and medical sciences
Child
Child & adolescent mental health
Child & adolescent psychiatry
Cognitive ability
Cultural differences
Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted
Female
Humans
Language
Male
Medical sciences
Mental Disorders - diagnosis
Parents & parenting
Performance evaluation
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychometrics. Diagnostic aid systems
Psychopathology. Psychiatry
Quantitative psychology
Questionnaires
Reproducibility of Results
Surveys and Questionnaires
Techniques and methods
Videotape Recording
Visual Perception
title A French study of the Dominic Interactive
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