Outcome
Type |
Measure |
Description |
Time frame |
Safety issue |
Other |
Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) |
Self-reported depression; range = 0-27; higher scores = more severe symptoms |
12 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Client Satisfaction Questionnaire - 8 (CSQ-8) |
Treatment satisfaction; range = 8-32; higher scores = greater satisfaction |
12 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Brief Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning (BIPF) |
PTSD-related psychosocial functioning; higher scores = more functional impairment. Items are scored on a Likert scale from 0 (never) to 6 (always). Participants are instructed to skip any item that does not reflect a domain that they have participated in over the past 30 days. The B-IPF is scored by summing the scored items to create a total score, dividing the total score by the maximum possible score based on the number of items scored, and multiplying by 100. |
12 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
WHO Quality of Life, Brief (WHOQOL-BREF) |
Self-reported quality of life; higher score = better quality of life. The World Health Organization Quality of Life - BREF (WHOQOL-BREF) is a self-report questionnaire which assesses 4 domains of quality of life (QOL): physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment. In addition, there are 2 items that measure overall QOL and general health. Subscales (domains): Physical Health (7 items) Psychological Health (6 items) Social Relationships (3 items) Environment (8 items) Scoring: Items scored 1-5. Raw domain score is the sum of respective item scores. All domain scores are then normalized to a range of 0-100. Refer to user manual for scoring algorithm. |
12 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Well-Being Inventory (WBI) |
The WBI is a multidimensional instrument that was designed to assess status, functioning, and satisfaction with four key life domains of vocation, finances, health, and social relationships. In total, there are 21 sections of the WBI and 126 questions/statements: 34 items for vocation, 24 for finances, 20 for health, and 48 for social relationships. Throughout the inventory, respondents are instructed to provide responses to categorical items (e.g., yes, no), or to endorse a single response from among statements using a 5-point Likert type response format (e.g., 1 = Never to 5 = Most or all of the time; 1 = Very dissatisfied to 5 = Very satisfied). Measures within each domain may be extracted from the full inventory and are available to use as separate entities depending on the needs of the administrator and/or the purpose of the assessment. |
12 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
DSM-5 Cross-cutting symptom measure |
This measure assesses comorbid mental health conditions. The CCSM consists of 23 questions in a self-report format that evaluates mental health domains that are significant across psychiatric diagnoses. It is quick and easy to administer, taking patients around 5 minutes to complete in the waiting room. There are 13 psychiatric domains in this measure: depression, anger, mania, anxiety, somatic symptoms, suicidal ideation, psychosis, sleep problems, memory, repetitive thoughts and behaviors, dissociation, personality functioning, and substance use. A 5-point scale (0-4) is used to record responses and reflect how much or how often the person has been concerned by a specific symptom over the previous 2 weeks. Additional inquiry is recommended if an individual scores a mild or slight rating, depending on the psychiatric symptom being investigated. This measure has good test-retest reliability in research settings and is useful and feasible in clinical practice. |
12 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) |
Self-reported depression; range = 0-27; higher scores = more severe symptoms |
24 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Brief Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning (BIPF) |
PTSD-related psychosocial functioning; higher scores = more functional impairment. Items are scored on a Likert scale from 0 (never) to 6 (always). Participants are instructed to skip any item that does not reflect a domain that they have participated in over the past 30 days. The B-IPF is scored by summing the scored items to create a total score, dividing the total score by the maximum possible score based on the number of items scored, and multiplying by 100. |
24 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
WHO Quality of Life, Brief (WHOQOL-BREF) |
Self-reported quality of life; higher score = better quality of life. The World Health Organization Quality of Life - BREF (WHOQOL-BREF) is a self-report questionnaire which assesses 4 domains of quality of life (QOL): physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment. In addition, there are 2 items that measure overall QOL and general health. Subscales (domains): Physical Health (7 items) Psychological Health (6 items) Social Relationships (3 items) Environment (8 items) Scoring: Items scored 1-5. Raw domain score is the sum of respective item scores. All domain scores are then normalized to a range of 0-100. Refer to user manual for scoring algorithm. |
24 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Well-Being Inventory (WBI) |
The WBI is a multidimensional instrument that was designed to assess status, functioning, and satisfaction with four key life domains of vocation, finances, health, and social relationships. In total, there are 21 sections of the WBI and 126 questions/statements: 34 items for vocation, 24 for finances, 20 for health, and 48 for social relationships. Throughout the inventory, respondents are instructed to provide responses to categorical items (e.g., yes, no), or to endorse a single response from among statements using a 5-point Likert type response format (e.g., 1 = Never to 5 = Most or all of the time; 1 = Very dissatisfied to 5 = Very satisfied). Measures within each domain may be extracted from the full inventory and are available to use as separate entities depending on the needs of the administrator and/or the purpose of the assessment. |
24 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
DSM-5 Cross-cutting symptom measure |
This measure assesses comorbid mental health conditions. The CCSM consists of 23 questions in a self-report format that evaluates mental health domains that are significant across psychiatric diagnoses. It is quick and easy to administer, taking patients around 5 minutes to complete in the waiting room. There are 13 psychiatric domains in this measure: depression, anger, mania, anxiety, somatic symptoms, suicidal ideation, psychosis, sleep problems, memory, repetitive thoughts and behaviors, dissociation, personality functioning, and substance use. A 5-point scale (0-4) is used to record responses and reflect how much or how often the person has been concerned by a specific symptom over the previous 2 weeks. Additional inquiry is recommended if an individual scores a mild or slight rating, depending on the psychiatric symptom being investigated. This measure has good test-retest reliability in research settings and is useful and feasible in clinical practice. |
24 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) |
Self-reported depression; range = 0-27; higher scores = more severe symptoms |
40 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Brief Inventory of Psychosocial Functioning (BIPF) |
PTSD-related psychosocial functioning; higher scores = more functional impairment. Items are scored on a Likert scale from 0 (never) to 6 (always). Participants are instructed to skip any item that does not reflect a domain that they have participated in over the past 30 days. The B-IPF is scored by summing the scored items to create a total score, dividing the total score by the maximum possible score based on the number of items scored, and multiplying by 100. |
40 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
WHO Quality of Life, Brief (WHOQOL-BREF) |
Self-reported quality of life; higher score = better quality of life. The World Health Organization Quality of Life - BREF (WHOQOL-BREF) is a self-report questionnaire which assesses 4 domains of quality of life (QOL): physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment. In addition, there are 2 items that measure overall QOL and general health. Subscales (domains): Physical Health (7 items) Psychological Health (6 items) Social Relationships (3 items) Environment (8 items) Scoring: Items scored 1-5. Raw domain score is the sum of respective item scores. All domain scores are then normalized to a range of 0-100. Refer to user manual for scoring algorithm. |
40 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
Well-Being Inventory (WBI) |
he WBI is a multidimensional instrument that was designed to assess status, functioning, and satisfaction with four key life domains of vocation, finances, health, and social relationships. In total, there are 21 sections of the WBI and 126 questions/statements: 34 items for vocation, 24 for finances, 20 for health, and 48 for social relationships. Throughout the inventory, respondents are instructed to provide responses to categorical items (e.g., yes, no), or to endorse a single response from among statements using a 5-point Likert type response format (e.g., 1 = Never to 5 = Most or all of the time; 1 = Very dissatisfied to 5 = Very satisfied). Measures within each domain may be extracted from the full inventory and are available to use as separate entities depending on the needs of the administrator and/or the purpose of the assessment. |
40 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Other |
DSM-5 Cross-cutting symptom measure |
This measure assesses comorbid mental health conditions. The CCSM consists of 23 questions in a self-report format that evaluates mental health domains that are significant across psychiatric diagnoses. It is quick and easy to administer, taking patients around 5 minutes to complete in the waiting room. There are 13 psychiatric domains in this measure: depression, anger, mania, anxiety, somatic symptoms, suicidal ideation, psychosis, sleep problems, memory, repetitive thoughts and behaviors, dissociation, personality functioning, and substance use. A 5-point scale (0-4) is used to record responses and reflect how much or how often the person has been concerned by a specific symptom over the previous 2 weeks. Additional inquiry is recommended if an individual scores a mild or slight rating, depending on the psychiatric symptom being investigated. This measure has good test-retest reliability in research settings and is useful and feasible in clinical practice. |
40 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Primary |
PTSD Checklist-5 (PCL-5) |
PTSD Symptom Severity - Self-Reported; Range = 0-80; higher scores = more severe symptoms |
12 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Primary |
Veterans' Affairs Mental Health Service Utilization |
All encounters with a mental health stop code in the Veterans Health Administration; variable is a count of total encounters |
9 month period from treatment initiation to 9 months later |
|
Primary |
PTSD Checklist-5 (PCL-5) |
PTSD Symptom Severity - Self-Reported; Range = 0-80; higher scores = more severe symptoms |
24 weeks post treatment initiation |
|
Primary |
PTSD Checklist-5 (PCL-5) |
PTSD Symptom Severity - Self-Reported; Range = 0-80; higher scores = more severe symptoms |
40 weeks post treatment initiation |
|