1995
DOI: 10.1007/bf01447471
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A Russian adaptation of the child behavior checklist: Psychometric properties and associations with child and maternal affective symptomatology and family functioning

Abstract: The Child Behavior Checklist's (CBCL) applicability to a sample of 105 Russian 9- and 10-year-old children was evaluated by examining the internal consistency of Russian adaptations of parent and teacher report forms. In addition, child behavior scores were correlated with child report of internalizing symptoms and maternal reports of their own internalizing symptoms and general family functioning. Finally, rates of child behavior problems and patterns of interrater agreement were compared with U.S. normative … Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…This rate is comparable to the 17.8% ADHD symptom prevalence reported in Germany (Baumgaertel, Wolraich, & Dietrich, 1995) and 16% to 21% symptom prevalence reported in the United States (Carlson, Tamm, & Miranda, 1997;DuPaul, Power, Anastopoulos, & Reid, 1998;Gadow & Sprafkin, 1997). However, in a study of the Russian version of the Child Behavior Checklist (Carter, Grigorenko, & Pauls, 1995), mean attention problem scores were twice as high as in the U.S. normative sample. Given the paucity of research on ADHD symptoms in Russian children and youth and controversy about ADHD symptom prevalence across cultures, this study aimed first to examine the prevalence of ADHD symptoms in Russian youth.…”
mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…This rate is comparable to the 17.8% ADHD symptom prevalence reported in Germany (Baumgaertel, Wolraich, & Dietrich, 1995) and 16% to 21% symptom prevalence reported in the United States (Carlson, Tamm, & Miranda, 1997;DuPaul, Power, Anastopoulos, & Reid, 1998;Gadow & Sprafkin, 1997). However, in a study of the Russian version of the Child Behavior Checklist (Carter, Grigorenko, & Pauls, 1995), mean attention problem scores were twice as high as in the U.S. normative sample. Given the paucity of research on ADHD symptoms in Russian children and youth and controversy about ADHD symptom prevalence across cultures, this study aimed first to examine the prevalence of ADHD symptoms in Russian youth.…”
mentioning
confidence: 87%
“…The Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) [2] is arguably the most widely used screening instrument in both the research and clinical settings, due in part to its good reliability and validity across different cultures [3,7,34,59]. In addition to sampling an extensive array of problematic behaviours and to assessing their degree of severity, the CBCL scoring system also provides cut-off thresholds to discriminate between non-clinical, 'borderline', and clinically relevant behaviours [2].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CBCL is a frequently used measure of young children's behavior problems, which was previously validated in a Russian general population sample [33], demonstrating good psychometric properties, including inter-rater reliability and internal consistency. Mothers reported on a three-point scale how true for the target child each of the listed problem behaviors were during the past two months (0 = ''not at all,'' 1 = ''sometimes true,'' and 2 = ''very often true'').…”
Section: Child Behavior Problemsmentioning
confidence: 99%