Abstract

A review of Australian mental health services identified a gap in routine outcome measures addressing social, emotional and behavioural domains for pre-schoolers and infants. A Child and Adolescent Mental Health Information Development Expert Advisory Panel working group developed the Health of the Nation Outcome Scales for Infants (HoNOSI), a clinician-reported routine outcome measure for infants 0-47 months. Prior face validity testing showed that the HoNOSI was considered useful in measuring mental health outcomes. To examine the concurrent validity of the HoNOSI. Mental health clinicians providing assessment and treatment to infants in routine clinical practice participated in the study. The mental health status of 108 infants were rated by a minimum of 26 clinicians with the HoNOSI, the Parent-Infant Relationship Global Assessment Scale (PIR-GAS) and measures of symptom severity and distress. The HoNOSI was statistically significantly correlated with the PIR-;GAS, rs = -0.73; Clinical Worry, rs = 0.77; and Severity Judgement ratings, rs = 0.85; P < 0.001. A good level of internal consistency was found. Using the COsensus-based Standards for the selection of health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN) criteria for judging instrument acceptability, the HoNOSI meets the standard for both concurrent validity and internal consistency. There has been a clear need for a routine outcome measure for use with infants. This study provides positive evidence of aspects of validity. These findings, along with those from the prior face validity study, support a controlled release of the HoNOSI accompanied by further research and development.

Highlights

  • A review of Australian mental health services identified a gap in routine outcome measures addressing social, emotional and behavioural domains for pre-schoolers and infants

  • Using the COsensus-based Standards for the selection of health Measurement INstruments (COSMIN) criteria for judging instrument acceptability, the HoNOSI meets the standard for both concurrent validity and internal consistency

  • There has been a clear need for a routine outcome measure for use with infants

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Summary

Introduction

A review of Australian mental health services identified a gap in routine outcome measures addressing social, emotional and behavioural domains for pre-schoolers and infants. Gowers et al[11] developed the HoNOSCA, for children and adolescents, as a set of scales to be used in child and adolescent mental health services.[12] The HoNOSCA has been widely used.[4,13,14,15,16,17,18,19] It was designed to be brief, have a similar structure to the HoNOS and provide a broad, quantitative measure of severity, with sound psychometric properties, to measure a range of behavioural, symptomatic, social and impairment domains in children and adolescents.[11,20] HoNOSCA is most appropriately applied to those over 4 years old.[21]

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