Youth Outcome Questionnaire

The Youth Outcome Questionnaire is a collection of questions designed to collect data regarding the effectiveness of youth therapies.[1] The Y-OQ is a parent report measure of treatment progress for children and adolescents (ages 4 – 17) receiving mental health interventions. The Y-OQ–SR is an adolescent self report measure appropriate for ages 12 – 18.[2]

The psychometric properties of the Youth Outcome Questionnaire Self-Report version [Y-OQ-SR]) were examined by Brigham Young University. BYU reported a favorable analysis in terms of internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and concurrent validity. They report it to be a valid and reliable self-report measure of psychosocial distress in youth psychotherapy research.[3] The Y-OQ-SR is backed by data based on large samples of youth who were carefully chosen to be representative of both clinical and normal populations.[4] Higher scores indicate greater disfunction, patients in psychiatric hospitals score about 100. Those in outpatient treatment average about 78 and the normal population is less than 47.[5]

These questionnaires have been used in outcome studies for individual teen programs such as Catherine Freer Wilderness Therapy Programs as well as studies conducted on groups of therapeutic boarding schools and Adventure therapy or Wilderness therapy programs. One such study involving 993 students from 9 schools was presented at the 114th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association.[4] Another study from 2001, involving 858 kids and their families enrolled in a group of seven wilderness therapy programs for a full year, has been published by the University of Idaho.[6][5]

References

  1. ^ OBHIC Research: "The Youth Outcome Questionnaire," http://www.obhic.com/research/does-wilderness-treatment-work.html. Outdoor Behavioral Healthcare Research Cooperative (OBHRC) at the University of Idaho
  2. ^ http://www.masspartnership.com/provider/outcomesmanagement/Outcomesfiles/Tools/YOQ.pdf
  3. ^ http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19693961 Ridge NW, Warren JS, Burlingame GM, Wells MG, Tumblin KM, Reliability and validity of the youth outcome questionnaire self-report, Brigham Young University
  4. ^ a b Ellen Behrens and Kristin Satterfield, of Findings from a Multi-Center Study of Youth Outcomes in Private Residential Treatment, Presented at the 114th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association, New Orleans, Louisiana, August 2006
  5. ^ a b http://www.obhic.com/research/does-wilderness-treatment-work.htm Does Wilderness Treatment Work?
  6. ^ Keith C. Russell, Ph.D., Assessment of Treatment Outcomes in Outdoor Behavioral Healthcare, University of Idaho-Wilderness Research Center