[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":826},["ShallowReactive",2],{"assessments-library":3},[4,10,16,21,27,32,38,44,49,55,61,67,72,78,83,88,94,99,105,111,116,122,127,132,138,144,149,154,159,165,170,176,182,188,194,199,204,210,215,220,225,230,235,241,246,252,258,264,270,275,281,287,292,298,304,310,315,321,326,332,337,342,347,352,358,363,368,374,380,385,390,395,400,406,411,416,421,427,432,438,443,448,453,458,463,468,474,479,484,489,495,501,506,511,516,521,526,531,536,542,547,552,557,562,567,572,578,583,588,593,598,603,608,613,619,624,630,635,640,645,651,656,661,667,672,678,684,689,694,699,704,709,715,721,727,733,739,745,750,755,760,765,770,775,780,786,791,796,801,806,811,816,821],{"title":5,"slug":6,"path":7,"summary":8,"categoryTitle":9},"ACE Score","ace-score","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Face-score","ACE score quiz: 10-category adverse childhood experiences questionnaire with automated scoring and clinical interpretation. Based on the Kaiser-CDC ACE Study.","Trauma Screening",{"title":11,"slug":12,"path":13,"summary":14,"categoryTitle":15},"ACEs Questionnaire Overview","aces-questionnaire-overview","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Faces-questionnaire-overview","The ACEs Questionnaire is a 10-item screening tool used to assess exposure to common forms of childhood trauma before age 18. It includes experiences of abuse, neglect, and household dysfunction and has been widely linked to lifelong impacts on health, behavior, and wellbeing.\n\nThe ACEs Questionnaire measures adverse childhood experiences to assess trauma's impact on health. It's useful for healthcare providers and educators to understand patient backgrounds and improve care strategies.\n",null,{"title":17,"slug":18,"path":19,"summary":20,"categoryTitle":15},"ADHD Clinical Outcome Scale – Self Report (ACOS-SR)","adhd-clinical-outcome-scale-self-report-acos-sr","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fadhd-clinical-outcome-scale-self-report-acos-sr","The ADHD Clinical Outcome Scale – Self-Report (ACOS-SR) is a brief 6-item measure developed to assess current ADHD symptom burden and functional impact in adults. It is derived from the clinician-rated ACOS and provides a rapid way to track treatment response, day-to-day functioning, and changes over time. Each item reflects core ADHD-related impairments commonly experienced in adulthood, including attention difficulties, distractibility, organization challenges, follow-through, impulsivity, and associated functional disruption. \n\nThe ACOS-SR produces a single severity score ranging from 0 to 18. Initial validation work suggests that scores of 9 or higher may indicate clinically significant levels of ADHD-related impairment, though interpretation should always be integrated with clinical judgment.\n",{"title":22,"slug":23,"path":24,"summary":25,"categoryTitle":26},"ADHD Screening","asrs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fasrs","World Health Organization-validated 18-question ADHD screening for adults. Part A\u002FB scoring and tracking. Part A: 68.7% sensitivity, 99.5% specificity (Kessler et al.).","Neurodivergence",{"title":28,"slug":29,"path":30,"summary":31,"categoryTitle":22},"ADHD Test for Adults (ASRS-v1.1)","adhd-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fadhd-test","Interactive 18-item ASRS-v1.1 screener for adult ADHD. Part A (6 items): ≥4 shaded = positive screen. Inattention vs hyperactivity\u002Fimpulsivity domain breakdown. World Health Organization-endorsed. Kessler et al. (2005).",{"title":33,"slug":34,"path":35,"summary":36,"categoryTitle":37},"AUDIT Scoring","audit","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Faudit","AUDIT: World Health Organization 10-item alcohol screen. Score 0–40: low risk (0–7), hazardous (8–15), harmful (16–19), dependence (≥20). Sensitivity 92%, specificity 94%.","Substance Use",{"title":39,"slug":40,"path":41,"summary":42,"categoryTitle":43},"Aberrant Behavior Checklist","aberrant-behavior-checklist","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Faberrant-behavior-checklist","The ABC is a 58-item caregiver-rated behavioral checklist measuring irritability, social withdrawal, stereotypy, hyperactivity, and inappropriate speech. Primary endpoint in ASD pharmacotherapy trials. Aman et al. (1985).","Autism & Developmental",{"title":45,"slug":46,"path":47,"summary":48,"categoryTitle":15},"Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST v3.1)","alcohol-smoking-and-substance-involvement-screening-test-assist-3","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Falcohol-smoking-and-substance-involvement-screening-test-assist-3","The Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST v3.1) is a comprehensive screening tool developed by the World Health Organization (World Health Organization) to identify substance use and categorize risk levels across multiple substance classes. It evaluates recent use, cravings, health\u002Fsocial\u002Flegal consequences, and prior attempts to control use. \n\nThe ASSIST provides a standardized Substance Involvement (SI) Score for each substance, allowing clinicians to differentiate low-, moderate-, and high-risk patterns. These SI scores support early detection, brief intervention planning, and referral pathways for specialized care when needed. While widely used in primary care, mental health, and substance-use settings, the ASSIST is a screening tool, not a diagnostic instrument.\n",{"title":50,"slug":51,"path":52,"summary":53,"categoryTitle":54},"Alexithymia Test (TAS-20 Guide)","alexithymia-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Falexithymia-test","Guide to alexithymia screening and TAS-20 score interpretation. Alexithymia is difficulty identifying and describing emotions, affecting ~10% of adults. TAS-20 ≥61 indicates alexithymia. Bagby et al. (1994).","Other",{"title":56,"slug":57,"path":58,"summary":59,"categoryTitle":60},"Anger Test (STAXI-2 Guide)","anger-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fanger-test","Anger assessment guide covering STAXI-2 expression styles (Anger-In, Anger-Out, Control-In, Control-Out), brief self-reflection questionnaire, and anger-related diagnoses (IED, PTSD, BPD). Spielberger (1999).","Anger & Emotion Regulation",{"title":62,"slug":63,"path":64,"summary":65,"categoryTitle":66},"Anxiety Test (GAD-7 Screener)","anxiety-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fanxiety-test","Interactive GAD-7 anxiety screener (0–21; ≥10 = moderate anxiety, sensitivity 89%). DSM-5-TR GAD criteria, 6 anxiety disorder types, and treatment overview.","Anxiety Screening",{"title":68,"slug":69,"path":70,"summary":71,"categoryTitle":15},"Assessment of Recovery Capital (ARC)","assessment-of-recovery-capital-arc","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fassessment-of-recovery-capital-arc","The Assessment of Recovery Capital (ARC) is a comprehensive, 50-item measure designed to evaluate the internal and external resources that support sustained substance-use recovery. \n\nDeveloped by Groshkova, Best, and White (2013), the ARC assesses two broad domains: Personal Recovery Capital and Social Recovery Capital. Together, these domains capture the psychological, physical, interpersonal, and community-level assets shown to protect against relapse and facilitate long-term wellbeing. The ARC provides a detailed profile of strengths and needs across multiple dimensions, making it useful for treatment planning, progress monitoring, and recovery-oriented care. \n\nIt does not diagnose substance-use disorders, but it offers clinicians a structured, evidence-based framework for understanding the assets that help individuals maintain recovery.\n",{"title":73,"slug":74,"path":75,"summary":76,"categoryTitle":77},"Attachment Style Quiz","attachment-style-quiz","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fattachment-style-quiz","Free attachment style quiz based on the ECR-R and Bartholomew & Horowitz four-style model. Discover if you're Secure, Preoccupied, Dismissing-Avoidant, or Fearful-Avoidant. Includes attachment dimensions and therapy options.","Relationship & Personality",{"title":79,"slug":80,"path":81,"summary":82,"categoryTitle":15},"Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ)","autism-spectrum-quotient-aq","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fautism-spectrum-quotient-aq","The Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ) is a 50-item self-report questionnaire designed by the Autism Research Centre (ARC) at the University of Cambridge to quantify the degree to which adults exhibit traits associated with Autism Spectrum Condition. \n\nThe AQ is not a diagnostic assessment; instead, it provides a structured trait profile across five cognitive–behavioral domains commonly associated with autism: Social Skills, Attention Switching, Attention to Detail, Communication, and Imagination. Scores range from 0 to 50, with higher scores indicating more autistic traits. Research suggests that scores 26 or higher reflect elevated autistic characteristics, while 32 or higher aligns with traditional research cutoff values. The AQ is widely used in screening, psychoeducation, research, and clinical triage.\n",{"title":84,"slug":85,"path":86,"summary":87,"categoryTitle":15},"Autism Spectrum Quotient – Brief (AQ-10)","autism-spectrum-quotient-brief-aq-10","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fautism-spectrum-quotient-brief-aq-10","The AQ-10 is a brief 10-item autism trait screener developed as a shortened version of the full 50-item Autism Spectrum Quotient (AQ). Its purpose is rapid identification of individuals who may benefit from a full autism assessment. \n\nEach item reflects a high-discriminating question drawn from the original AQ domains: Social Skills, Communication, Attention Switching, Attention to Detail, and Imagination. Scores range from 0–10, with 6 or more recommended by NICE as the threshold for referral for a comprehensive autism assessment. The AQ-10 is not a diagnostic tool but serves as an efficient “red flag” screener suitable for busy clinical environments.\n",{"title":89,"slug":90,"path":91,"summary":92,"categoryTitle":93},"BAI: Beck Anxiety Inventory","bai","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbai","21-item self-report measure of anxiety severity emphasizing somatic symptoms. Scores 0–63 across four severity bands. Effectively discriminates anxiety from depression.","Anxiety",{"title":95,"slug":96,"path":97,"summary":98,"categoryTitle":37},"BBGS: Brief Biosocial Gambling Screen","bbgs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbbgs","The Brief Biosocial Gambling Screen (BBGS) is a 3-item validated tool designed to identify disordered gambling symptoms in clinical settings.",{"title":100,"slug":101,"path":102,"summary":103,"categoryTitle":104},"BDD Test (Body Dysmorphic Disorder)","bdd-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbdd-test","BDD screening test using the BDDQ (Body Dysmorphic Disorder Questionnaire). BDD-YBOCS severity interpretation (0–48), BDD behaviors, and comparison with OCD and eating disorders. Phillips (1996).","OCD & Anxiety",{"title":106,"slug":107,"path":108,"summary":109,"categoryTitle":110},"BDI-II: Beck Depression Inventory","bdi-ii","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbdi-ii","21-item clinician-guided measure of depression severity. Scores 0–63 across four bands: minimal, mild, moderate, severe. Widely used in CBT research and clinical settings.","Depression",{"title":112,"slug":113,"path":114,"summary":115,"categoryTitle":15},"BPD Screening - Borderline Personality Disorder Assessment","bpd-screening","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbpd-screening","The BPD screening assessment identifies individuals at risk for Borderline Personality Disorder using validated clinical measures. This comprehensive screening evaluates the nine DSM-5-TR diagnostic criteria including emotional dysregulation, unstable relationships, identity disturbance, and impulsivity. Early detection through structured BPD screening enables timely intervention and evidence-based treatment planning for this complex personality disorder.",{"title":117,"slug":118,"path":119,"summary":120,"categoryTitle":121},"BPD Test: 9 DSM-5-TR Borderline Personality Disorder Criteria + Scoring","bpd-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbpd-test","Free BPD test based on the nine DSM-5-TR criteria for borderline personality disorder. Positive screen at ≥5 of 9. Covers emotional dysregulation, unstable relationships, identity disturbance, impulsivity, and fear of abandonment. MSI-BPD informed. Educational only — clinical evaluation required for diagnosis.","Personality Disorders",{"title":123,"slug":124,"path":125,"summary":126,"categoryTitle":54},"BPRS (Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale)","bprs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbprs","18-item clinician-administered psychiatric severity scale. Score 18–126; >31 clinically significant. Covers positive\u002Fnegative symptoms, mood, hostility, and activation. Public domain. Overall & Gorham (1962).",{"title":128,"slug":129,"path":130,"summary":131,"categoryTitle":54},"BRS: Brief Resilience Scale","brs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbrs","6-item measure of psychological resilience — the ability to bounce back from stress. Score 1–5 (mean of all items after reverse-scoring items 2, 4, 6). Smith et al. (2008).",{"title":133,"slug":134,"path":135,"summary":136,"categoryTitle":137},"Bipolar Test (MDQ)","bipolar-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbipolar-test","Free bipolar disorder screener based on the MDQ (Mood Disorder Questionnaire). 13 yes\u002Fno questions about manic\u002Fhypomanic symptoms. Positive screen: ≥7 symptoms + same period + moderate impairment. Sensitivity 73% for bipolar I\u002FII. Hirschfeld et al. (2000).","Mood Disorders",{"title":139,"slug":140,"path":141,"summary":142,"categoryTitle":143},"Body Dysmorphia Test","body-dysmorphia-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbody-dysmorphia-test","Take a BDDQ-aligned body dysmorphic disorder screener. Explore what BDD actually looks like, how it differs from normal appearance concerns, and what treatments work.","OCD & Related",{"title":145,"slug":146,"path":147,"summary":148,"categoryTitle":15},"Borderline Personality Scale - BPD Severity & Dimensional Assessment","borderline-personality-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fborderline-personality-scale","The Borderline Personality Scale (BPS) measures the severity and dimensional aspects of borderline personality features beyond binary diagnosis. This validated assessment quantifies symptom intensity across affective instability, identity disturbance, negative relationships, and self-harm domains. Severity tracking with the BPS enables measurement-based care, treatment response monitoring, and nuanced clinical decision-making for borderline personality disorder.",{"title":150,"slug":151,"path":152,"summary":153,"categoryTitle":15},"Brief Assessment of Recovery Capital (BARC-10)","brief-assessment-of-recovery-capital-barc-10","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbrief-assessment-of-recovery-capital-barc-10","The Brief Assessment of Recovery Capital (BARC-10) is a short, validated measure designed to assess the internal and external resources that support sustained recovery from substance use. \n\nAdapted from the original 50-item Assessment of Recovery Capital (ARC), the BARC-10 captures the essential elements of personal growth, social connection, stability, and wellbeing associated with long-term recovery. Unlike deficit-based substance-use tools, the BARC-10 focuses on strengths and protective factors. Its single total score provides a quick overview of how well-resourced an individual is in their recovery journey. \n\nIt does not diagnose substance-use disorders but offers clinicians a structured way to understand recovery readiness, resilience, and areas where support may be needed.\n",{"title":155,"slug":156,"path":157,"summary":158,"categoryTitle":54},"Brief Pain Inventory (BPI)","brief-pain-inventory","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbrief-pain-inventory","Validated 9-item pain measure: Pain Severity (worst\u002Fleast\u002Faverage\u002Fcurrent pain) and Pain Interference subscales, each 0–10. Score ≥4 indicates clinically significant pain. Cleeland & Ryan (1994). MD Anderson Cancer Center.",{"title":160,"slug":161,"path":162,"summary":163,"categoryTitle":164},"Brief Symptom Inventory","brief-symptom-inventory","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fbrief-symptom-inventory","The BSI is a 53-item self-report psychiatric symptom inventory measuring 9 dimensions (Somatization, OC, Depression, Anxiety, Hostility, Phobic Anxiety, Paranoid Ideation, Psychoticism) plus 3 global indices including GSI. T-score ≥63 = clinical caseness. Derogatis & Melisaratos (1983).","Psychiatric Assessment",{"title":166,"slug":167,"path":168,"summary":169,"categoryTitle":54},"Burnout Assessment","burnout-assessment","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fburnout-assessment","Occupational burnout screening guide with 9-item screener. Covers emotional exhaustion, cynicism, and reduced efficacy. Compares MBI, OLBI, CBI, and BAT tools. World Health Organization ICD-11 QD85. Maslach & Jackson (1981).",{"title":171,"slug":172,"path":173,"summary":174,"categoryTitle":175},"Burnout Inventory (MBI)","burnout-inventory","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fburnout-inventory","Maslach Burnout Inventory interpretation guide: Emotional Exhaustion, Depersonalization, and Personal Accomplishment subscales. MBI-HSS\u002FGS reference ranges and comparison with OLBI, CBI, and BAT. Maslach & Jackson (1981).","Occupational Health",{"title":177,"slug":178,"path":179,"summary":180,"categoryTitle":181},"Burnout Test","burnout-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fburnout-test","Take the Oldenburg Burnout Inventory (OLBI) — a research-validated 16-item measure of exhaustion and disengagement across any high-demand role.","Stress & Burnout",{"title":183,"slug":184,"path":185,"summary":186,"categoryTitle":187},"C-FOCI: Children's Florida Obsessive Compulsive Inventory","c-foci","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fc-foci","A brief self-report measure of OCD symptom severity in children and adolescents aged 7–17. Comprises a symptom checklist and a 5-item severity scale.","OCD & Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders",{"title":189,"slug":190,"path":191,"summary":192,"categoryTitle":193},"C-SSRS: Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale","c-ssrs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fc-ssrs","The FDA-recommended criterion standard for suicide risk assessment, identifying severity and intensity of suicidal ideation and behavior.","Risk & Safety",{"title":195,"slug":196,"path":197,"summary":198,"categoryTitle":37},"CAGE-AID: CAGE Adapted to Include Drugs","cage-aid","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcage-aid","4-item yes\u002Fno screener for alcohol and drug use disorders. Adapts the CAGE scale to cover all substances. Score ≥2 is a positive screen requiring further evaluation.",{"title":200,"slug":201,"path":202,"summary":203,"categoryTitle":37},"CAGE: Alcohol Use Disorder Screening","cage","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcage","4-item yes\u002Fno alcohol screening questionnaire. Score ≥2 is a positive screen for alcohol use disorder. Cut down, Annoyed, Guilty, Eye-opener. Validated across primary care and clinical settings.",{"title":205,"slug":206,"path":207,"summary":208,"categoryTitle":209},"CAQ Score Interpretation","caq","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcaq","Interpret CAQ T-scores across 12 clinical syndrome scales: hypochondriasis, suicidal depression, agitation, anxious depression, paranoia, schizophrenia, and more. Clinical reference guide for psychologists.","Clinician-Administered",{"title":211,"slug":212,"path":213,"summary":214,"categoryTitle":54},"CARS-2 (Childhood Autism Rating Scale)","cars","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcars","Clinician-administered autism assessment instrument. 15 domains rated 1–4. Score 15–60; ≥30 autism range; ≥37 severe autism. Three forms: CARS2-ST, CARS2-HF, CARS2-QPC. Schopler et al. (1988). WPS.",{"title":216,"slug":217,"path":218,"summary":219,"categoryTitle":26},"CAST: Childhood Autism Spectrum Test","childhood-autism-spectrum-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fchildhood-autism-spectrum-test","A 37-item parent-report screening tool for autism spectrum characteristics in children aged 4–11. Designed for population-level screening; a score ≥15 indicates further evaluation is warranted.",{"title":221,"slug":222,"path":223,"summary":224,"categoryTitle":26},"CAT-Q","cat-q","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcat-q","25-item autism masking scale. Learn how the CAT-Q identifies camouflaging behaviors, subscale scoring, and why high scores indicate burnout risk.",{"title":226,"slug":227,"path":228,"summary":229,"categoryTitle":54},"CD-RISC: Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale","cd-risc","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcd-risc","25-item validated measure of resilience. Score 0–100; population mean ≈ 80. Higher scores indicate greater resilience capacity. Free for clinical use. Connor & Davidson (2003).",{"title":231,"slug":232,"path":233,"summary":234,"categoryTitle":110},"CES-D: Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale","ces-d","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fces-d","20-item NIMH depression scale measuring symptom frequency in the past week. Score 0–60; ≥16 indicates significant depressive symptoms. Public domain. Radloff (1977).",{"title":236,"slug":237,"path":238,"summary":239,"categoryTitle":240},"CGI: Clinical Global Impression","cgi","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcgi","Standardized clinician-rated measure of psychiatric illness severity and treatment response. Two core scales: CGI-S and CGI-I.","Clinician-Rated",{"title":242,"slug":243,"path":244,"summary":245,"categoryTitle":37},"CRAFFT: Adolescent Substance Use Screening Tool","crafft","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcrafft","6-item AAP-recommended screener for adolescent alcohol and drug use (ages 12–21). Score ≥2 is a positive screen for high-risk substance use or a substance use disorder.",{"title":247,"slug":248,"path":249,"summary":250,"categoryTitle":251},"Childhood Trauma Test (ACE Score)","childhood-trauma-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fchildhood-trauma-test","The 10-category ACE (Adverse Childhood Experiences) screener. ACE score ≥4 associated with significantly elevated risk for depression, PTSD, substance use, and chronic disease. Felitti et al. (1998).","Trauma & ACEs Assessment",{"title":253,"slug":254,"path":255,"summary":256,"categoryTitle":257},"Codependency Test","codependency-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcodependency-test","Reflect on codependency patterns using a structured 10-item questionnaire aligned with the Spann-Fischer scale and ACoA research.","Relationships & Attachment",{"title":259,"slug":260,"path":261,"summary":262,"categoryTitle":263},"Communication Style Test","communication-style-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcommunication-style-test","Find out if you communicate passively, assertively, aggressively, or passive-aggressively.","Relationships",{"title":265,"slug":266,"path":267,"summary":268,"categoryTitle":269},"Compassion Fatigue Test","compassion-fatigue-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fcompassion-fatigue-test","For nurses, therapists, and caregivers: measure compassion fatigue and compassion satisfaction.","Burnout",{"title":271,"slug":272,"path":273,"summary":274,"categoryTitle":26},"Conners \u002F CAARS: ADHD Rating Scales","conners","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fconners","Conners 3 (ages 6–18) and CAARS (adults 18+) are the most widely used norm-referenced ADHD rating scales. Both produce T-scores versus age\u002Fgender norms. T ≥65 clinically significant. Published by MHS.",{"title":276,"slug":277,"path":278,"summary":279,"categoryTitle":280},"Conners Rating Scale (Conners 3 Guide)","conners-rating-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fconners-rating-scale","Criterion-standard ADHD rating scale for children and adolescents ages 6–18. T-score interpreter (T≥65 clinical threshold). Parent, teacher, and self-report forms. Conners (2008), MHS.","ADHD & Behavioral Assessment",{"title":282,"slug":283,"path":284,"summary":285,"categoryTitle":286},"DASS-21 Scoring Calculator","dass-21","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdass-21","DASS-21 scoring calculator with severity bands. ×2 multiplier applied automatically. Depression, anxiety, and stress subscales with cutoffs. Compare with PHQ-9 and GAD-7.","Depression · Anxiety · Stress",{"title":288,"slug":289,"path":290,"summary":291,"categoryTitle":37},"DAST-10: Drug Abuse Screening Test","dast-10","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdast-10","10-item yes\u002Fno screener for drug abuse and dependence. Five severity levels: None to Severe. Pairs with AUDIT for comprehensive SBIRT workflows.",{"title":293,"slug":294,"path":295,"summary":296,"categoryTitle":297},"DERS: Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (36-Item, 6 Subscales, Scoring)","ders","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fders","DERS (Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale): 36-item self-report measure of emotion regulation difficulty across six subscales, nonacceptance, goals, impulse control, awareness, strategies, clarity. Total range 36–180; higher = greater difficulty. Gratz & Roemer (2004).","Emotion Regulation",{"title":299,"slug":300,"path":301,"summary":302,"categoryTitle":303},"DES: Dissociative Experiences Scale","des","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdes","28-item self-report measure of dissociation. Score 0–100 (mean of items); ≥30 warrants clinical evaluation. Covers amnesia, depersonalization, and absorption. Public domain. Bernstein & Putnam (1986).","Trauma & PTSD",{"title":305,"slug":306,"path":307,"summary":308,"categoryTitle":309},"DID Test (Dissociative Identity Disorder)","did-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdid-test","DID screening guide with DES-II score interpreter (0–100; ≥30 high dissociation). DSM-5-TR criteria, dissociative disorders spectrum, and SCID-D comparison. Bernstein & Putnam (1986).","Dissociative Disorders Assessment",{"title":311,"slug":312,"path":313,"summary":314,"categoryTitle":187},"DOCS: Dimensional Obsessive-Compulsive Scale","docs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdocs","A 20-item self-report measure assessing OCD severity across four symptom dimensions: contamination, responsibility for harm, unacceptable intrusive thoughts, and symmetry\u002Fordering.",{"title":316,"slug":317,"path":318,"summary":319,"categoryTitle":320},"Depression Test (PHQ-9 Screener)","depression-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdepression-test","Interactive PHQ-9 depression screener (0–27; ≥10 = moderate depression, sensitivity 88%). DSM-5-TR MDD criteria, 5 severity levels, depression types, and treatment guide.","Depression Screening",{"title":322,"slug":323,"path":324,"summary":325,"categoryTitle":15},"Devereux Adult Resilience Survey (DARS)","devereux-adult-resilience-survey-dars","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdevereux-adult-resilience-survey-dars","The Devereux Adult Resilience Survey (DARS) is a 36-item self-assessment designed to measure protective factors that support emotional well-being, resilience, and healthy functioning in adults. Developed by the Devereux Center for Resilient Children (DCRC), the DARS emphasizes strengths rather than symptoms, allowing individuals and clinicians to identify internal and external resources that promote adaptability and recovery. \n\nThe survey produces a total resilience score along with four domain scores: Internal Beliefs, Relationships, Initiative, and Self-Control. These domains reflect core components of adult resilience within the DCRC’s research-based protective factors framework. The DARS is intended for strengths-based assessment, personal development, coaching, behavioral health, wellness programs, and organizational contexts rather than diagnosis.\n",{"title":327,"slug":328,"path":329,"summary":330,"categoryTitle":331},"Dissociation Test (DES Guide)","dissociation-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdissociation-test","Guide to dissociation screening and DES score interpretation. DES mean score 0–100; ≥30 warrants clinical evaluation for dissociative disorder. Covers amnesia, depersonalization, and absorption. Bernstein & Putnam (1986).","Trauma",{"title":333,"slug":334,"path":335,"summary":336,"categoryTitle":15},"Dissociative Experiences Scale, Brief (DES-B)","dissociative-experiences-scale-brief-des-b","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdissociative-experiences-scale-brief-des-b","The Dissociative Experiences Scale–Brief (DES-B) is an 8-item short form derived from the original 28-item Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES). Developed to offer a rapid, clinically efficient way to screen for dissociation, the DES-B measures the frequency of common dissociative phenomena such as depersonalization, derealization, memory gaps, and absorption. \n\nEach item is rated from 0–100%, and the total score is the average of all responses. Research shows that the DES-B retains strong alignment with the full DES while dramatically reducing completion time, making it ideal for busy clinical settings where dissociation is suspected. The DES-B does not diagnose dissociative disorders but can help identify when further trauma-informed assessment is warranted.\n",{"title":338,"slug":339,"path":340,"summary":341,"categoryTitle":37},"EDS: E-Cigarette Dependence Scale","eds","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Feds","20-item measure of e-cigarette and vaping dependence severity. Assesses five subscales including craving and compulsive use. Morean et al. (2019).",{"title":343,"slug":344,"path":345,"summary":346,"categoryTitle":110},"EPDS: Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale","epds","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fepds","10-item perinatal depression screener. Score 0–30; standard cutoff ≥13. Item 10 (self-harm) always requires clinical follow-up. Translated and validated across multiple languages and cultures.",{"title":348,"slug":349,"path":350,"summary":351,"categoryTitle":54},"Emotion Dysregulation (DERS Guide)","emotion-dysregulation","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Femotion-dysregulation","Guide to emotion dysregulation and DERS-16 score interpretation. Transdiagnostic feature of BPD, ADHD, PTSD, and depression. DERS-16 scores 16–80; >40 clinically elevated. Gratz & Roemer (2004).",{"title":353,"slug":354,"path":355,"summary":356,"categoryTitle":357},"Emotional Intelligence Test (EQ Assessment)","emotional-intelligence-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Femotional-intelligence-test","Emotional intelligence assessment guide covering the Mayer-Salovey 4-branch model, MSCEIT, EQ-i 2.0, and TEIQue. Includes brief EI self-reflection questionnaire.","Emotional & Social Intelligence",{"title":359,"slug":360,"path":361,"summary":362,"categoryTitle":15},"Empathy Quotient (EQ)","empathy-quotient-eq","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fempathy-quotient-eq","The Empathy Quotient (EQ) is a 60-item self-report measure developed by Baron-Cohen and Wheelwright (2004) to assess empathy levels in adults, capturing both cognitive empathy (understanding others’ thoughts and feelings) and affective empathy (responding emotionally to another’s experience). Designed by the Autism Research Centre (ARC) at the University of Cambridge, the EQ evaluates empathy as a continuous trait. \n\nOnly 40 items contribute to scoring, yielding a total range of 0–80, with higher scores reflecting stronger empathic tendencies. Although commonly used in autism assessment contexts, the EQ is not diagnostic and should not be used to determine ASD status.\n",{"title":364,"slug":365,"path":366,"summary":367,"categoryTitle":15},"Empathy Quotient – Short Form (EQ-10)","empathy-quotient-short-form-eq-10","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fempathy-quotient-short-form-eq-10","The EQ-10 is a 10-item abbreviated version of the 60-item Empathy Quotient (EQ), created as a rapid screening tool for empathy-related traits in adults. Developed by Allison, Baron-Cohen, and colleagues, the EQ-10 retains the most discriminating items from the full EQ and provides a quick estimate of general empathic tendencies. Scores range from 0–10, with higher scores indicating greater self-reported empathy. The EQ-10 is not intended for diagnosis or for evaluating the full multidimensional construct of empathy; rather, it is a compact indicator suited for research settings, preliminary screening, and contexts where time is limited.",{"title":369,"slug":370,"path":371,"summary":372,"categoryTitle":373},"Empathy Test (EQ Score Guide)","empathy-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fempathy-test","Empathy Quotient (EQ-60\u002FEQ-40) score interpreter. Covers cognitive vs affective empathy, IRI four subscales, and tool comparison. Baron-Cohen & Wheelwright (2004).","Social & Emotional Functioning",{"title":375,"slug":376,"path":377,"summary":378,"categoryTitle":379},"Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS)","epworth-sleepiness-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fepworth-sleepiness-scale","8-item daytime sleepiness scale. ESS >10 indicates excessive sleepiness; evaluate for sleep apnea, narcolepsy, or hypersomnia. Johns (1991). Free for clinical use.","Sleep Disorders Screening",{"title":381,"slug":382,"path":383,"summary":384,"categoryTitle":15},"Executive Skills Questionnaire – Revised (ESQ-R)","esq-r","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fexecutive-skills-questionnaire-revised-esq-r","The Executive Skills Questionnaire – Revised (ESQ-R) is a 36-item self-report measure designed to assess adult executive functioning using Dawson & Guare’s widely used Executive Skills framework. The ESQ-R provides a structured overview of strengths and challenges across 12 executive skill domains essential for daily life, work performance, emotional regulation, and goal-directed behavior. \n\nEach domain is represented by three items rated from 1–5, producing domain scores ranging from 3–15. Higher scores reflect stronger executive functioning in that skill area. The ESQ-R is not a diagnostic tool; it is best used for profiling strengths and needs to support coaching, intervention planning, or psychoeducation.\n",{"title":386,"slug":387,"path":388,"summary":389,"categoryTitle":187},"FOCI: Florida Obsessive Compulsive Inventory","foci","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Ffoci","A brief self-report measure for adults comprising a symptom checklist and a 5-item severity scale. Quick to administer and sensitive to treatment change. A severity score ≥8 suggests clinically significant OCD.",{"title":391,"slug":392,"path":393,"summary":394,"categoryTitle":93},"GAD-7 Scoring","gad-7","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fgad-7","GAD-7 scoring: total 0–21. Cutoffs: mild ≥5, moderate ≥10, severe ≥15. Sensitivity 89% at ≥10. Co-administer with PHQ-9 for anxiety and depression screening.",{"title":396,"slug":397,"path":398,"summary":399,"categoryTitle":54},"GAF (Global Assessment of Functioning)","gaf","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fgaf","100-point clinician-rated scale measuring overall psychological, social, and occupational functioning. DSM-IV Axis V standard. Scores \u003C50 indicate serious impairment. Public domain. APA (1994).",{"title":401,"slug":402,"path":403,"summary":404,"categoryTitle":405},"GAS (Goal Attainment Scaling)","gas","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fgas","Goal Attainment Scaling (GAS): individualized outcome measurement using a 5-point scale (−2 to +2) across 3–5 patient-specific goals. T-score of 50 = expected outcome achieved. Used in rehabilitation, pediatric treatment, and person-centered care.","Clinician &amp; Patient",{"title":407,"slug":408,"path":409,"summary":410,"categoryTitle":110},"GDS-15: Geriatric Depression Scale","gds","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fgds","15-item yes\u002Fno depression screener validated for adults aged 60+. Excludes somatic items that inflate scores in older adults. Score ≥5 indicates possible depression.",{"title":412,"slug":413,"path":414,"summary":415,"categoryTitle":93},"HAM-A: Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale","ham-a","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fham-a","Clinician-administered scale measuring the severity of anxiety symptoms across psychic and somatic subscales. Criterion standard for clinical trials.",{"title":417,"slug":418,"path":419,"summary":420,"categoryTitle":110},"HAM-D: Hamilton Depression Rating Scale","ham-d","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fham-d","Clinician-administered criterion standard for measuring depression severity. The benchmark outcome measure in antidepressant clinical trials, with ≤7 as the remission criterion.",{"title":422,"slug":423,"path":424,"summary":425,"categoryTitle":426},"IADL: Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale","iadl","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fiadl","An 8-item clinician-rated or self-report scale assessing functional independence in complex daily activities such as managing finances, medication, transportation, and housekeeping. Originally developed by Lawton & Brody (1969) for older adult populations.","Functional Status & Quality of Life",{"title":428,"slug":429,"path":430,"summary":431,"categoryTitle":303},"IES-R: Impact of Event Scale-Revised","ies-r","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fies-r","22-item trauma impact measure with Intrusion, Avoidance, and Hyperarousal subscales. Score 0–88; ≥33 PTSD likely. Most widely used PTSD symptom scale in international trauma research. Weiss & Marmar (1997).",{"title":433,"slug":434,"path":435,"summary":436,"categoryTitle":437},"ISI: Insomnia Severity Index","isi","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fisi","7-item validated insomnia severity scale. Score 0–28 across four severity bands: no insomnia, subthreshold, moderate clinical, severe. Primary outcome measure in CBT-I trials. Morin et al., 2011.","Sleep",{"title":439,"slug":440,"path":441,"summary":442,"categoryTitle":15},"Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly – Self Report (IQCODE-SR)","informant-questionnaire-on-cognitive-decline-in-the-elderly-self-report-iqcode-sr","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Finformant-questionnaire-on-cognitive-decline-in-the-elderly-self-report-iqcode-sr","The IQCODE-SR is the self-report adaptation of the widely used Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQCODE). While the original IQCODE is completed by a knowledgeable informant, the IQCODE-SR allows older adults to report on their perceived cognitive changes over the past 10 years. Items cover everyday memory, reasoning, problem-solving, and functional abilities. \n\nRespondents rate whether each ability has improved, stayed the same, or worsened, producing a mean score between 1.0 and 5.0. Higher scores indicate greater perceived decline. Research-based thresholds (e.g., ≥3.30–3.38 for possible cognitive decline; ≥3.60 for stronger concern) provide guidance for further evaluation, but the IQCODE-SR is a screening tool, not a diagnostic assessment.\n",{"title":444,"slug":445,"path":446,"summary":447,"categoryTitle":15},"Internet Gaming Disorder Scale – Short Form (IGDS9-SF)","internet-gaming-disorder-scale-short-form-igds9-sf","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Finternet-gaming-disorder-scale-short-form-igds9-sf","The IGDS9-SF is a 9-item self-report tool that assesses the severity of Internet Gaming Disorder (IGD) symptoms based on the DSM-5-TR criteria. It is widely used to screen for problematic gaming behavior and support early identification of gaming-related functional impairment.\n\nThe Internet Gaming Disorder Scale – Short Form (IGDS9-SF) is a tool designed to assess the severity of internet gaming disorder symptoms.\n",{"title":449,"slug":450,"path":451,"summary":452,"categoryTitle":54},"K10: Kessler Psychological Distress Scale","k10","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fk10","10-item measure of non-specific psychological distress. Scores 10–50 across four bands: likely well, mild, moderate, severe. Mandatory screening tool for Australian Medicare mental health plans.",{"title":454,"slug":455,"path":456,"summary":457,"categoryTitle":93},"LSAS: Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale","lsas","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Flsas","24-item criterion-standard social anxiety measure. Fear and avoidance rated across social and performance situations. Total score 0–144; ≥55 indicates SAD. Free for clinical use. Liebowitz (1987).",{"title":459,"slug":460,"path":461,"summary":462,"categoryTitle":104},"Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale","liebowitz-social-anxiety-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fliebowitz-social-anxiety-scale","The LSAS is a 24-item rating scale assessing Fear and Avoidance across 13 performance and 11 social interaction situations. Total score 0–144. Severity: 0–29 minimal, 30–49 mild, 50–64 moderate, 65–79 marked, 80–94 severe, ≥95 very severe. Liebowitz (1987).",{"title":464,"slug":465,"path":466,"summary":467,"categoryTitle":15},"Life Events Checklist for DSM-5-TR (LEC-5) and Criterion A","life-events-checklist-for-dsm-5-lec-5-and-criterion-a","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Flife-events-checklist-for-dsm-5-lec-5-and-criterion-a","The LEC-5 is a brief, structured checklist developed by the National Center for PTSD to document exposure to potentially traumatic events. It is designed to support clinical evaluation of PTSD by identifying experiences that may meet DSM-5-TR Criterion A, the requirement for a qualifying trauma. \n\nRather than measuring symptoms or severity, the LEC-5 maps the types and modes of exposure an individual has encountered, including direct experience, witnessing, learning of events affecting close others, or work-related exposure. The LEC-5 is typically administered alongside the PCL-5 or CAPS-5 and plays an important role in determining whether PTSD symptoms can be evaluated within the appropriate diagnostic framework.\n",{"title":469,"slug":470,"path":471,"summary":472,"categoryTitle":473},"Locus of Control Test","locus-of-control-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Flocus-of-control-test","Discover whether you lean internal or external — and what it means for resilience and motivation.","Resilience",{"title":475,"slug":476,"path":477,"summary":478,"categoryTitle":257},"Loneliness Test","loneliness-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Floneliness-test","Take the UCLA-3 loneliness screener and explore what loneliness research says about connection, health, and evidence-based interventions.",{"title":480,"slug":481,"path":482,"summary":483,"categoryTitle":110},"MADRS: Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale","madrs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmadrs","10-item clinician-administered depression severity scale. Score 0–60 across four bands. Remission criterion ≤10. Primary outcome measure in antidepressant clinical trials. Montgomery & Åsberg (1979).",{"title":485,"slug":486,"path":487,"summary":488,"categoryTitle":37},"MAST (Michigan Alcohol Screening Test)","mast","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmast","25-item validated yes\u002Fno screening tool for alcohol use disorder with weighted scoring. Score 0–53; ≥5 indicates probable alcoholism. Public domain. Selzer (1971).",{"title":490,"slug":491,"path":492,"summary":493,"categoryTitle":494},"MDQ: Mood Disorder Questionnaire","mdq","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmdq","13-item validated bipolar spectrum screener. Three-criterion algorithm: ≥7 symptoms, symptom clustering, functional impairment. Sensitivity 73%, specificity 90%. Hirschfeld et al., 2000.","Bipolar Disorder",{"title":496,"slug":497,"path":498,"summary":499,"categoryTitle":500},"MMSE (Mini-Mental State Examination)","mmse","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmmse","The MMSE is a classic 30-point cognitive screening test assessing orientation, registration, attention, recall, and language. Folstein, Folstein & McHugh (1975). Now public domain.","Cognitive Screening",{"title":502,"slug":503,"path":504,"summary":505,"categoryTitle":15},"Michigan Alcohol Screening Test (MAST)","michigan-alcohol-screening-test-mast","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmichigan-alcohol-screening-test-mast","The MAST is a widely used self-report screening tool developed to identify alcohol use disorders. It assesses both lifetime and current patterns of problematic drinking, making it useful in clinical, community, and correctional settings.\n\nThe Michigan Alcohol Screening Test (MAST) is a tool used to assess alcohol use and its impact on an individual's life. It is designed for individuals who may be struggling with alcohol-related issues and is useful for identifying the severity of alcohol use and guiding treatment decisions.\n",{"title":507,"slug":508,"path":509,"summary":510,"categoryTitle":209},"MoCA (Montreal Cognitive Assessment)","moca","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmoca","Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA): 30-item clinician-administered cognitive screen across 8 domains. Score 0–30 (+1 for ≤12 years education). Cutoffs: ≥26 normal, 18–25 mild, 10–17 moderate, \u003C10 severe. 90% sensitivity for MCI.",{"title":512,"slug":513,"path":514,"summary":515,"categoryTitle":500},"Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA)","montreal-cognitive-assessment","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmontreal-cognitive-assessment","MoCA is the preferred cognitive screening tool for detecting Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), with 90% sensitivity vs 18% for MMSE. 30-point scale with 8 domains. Nasreddine et al. (2005).",{"title":517,"slug":518,"path":519,"summary":520,"categoryTitle":15},"Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ)","mood-disorder-questionnaire-mdq","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmood-disorder-questionnaire-mdq","The Mood Disorder Questionnaire (MDQ) is a brief, validated screening tool designed to detect lifetime symptoms consistent with bipolar spectrum disorders. Developed by Hirschfeld and colleagues (2000), it assesses the presence of manic and hypomanic features, evaluates whether symptoms occurred during the same period, and screens for associated functional impairment. \n\nThe MDQ is widely used in primary care, psychiatry, and mental health settings to differentiate bipolar presentations from unipolar depression or other conditions. A positive screen suggests the need for a structured diagnostic evaluation, but the MDQ is not a diagnostic test and may miss bipolar II or soft-spectrum presentations.\n\nType: Bipolar spectrum screening tool\n\nPopulation: Adults (18+)\n\nLength: 13 symptom items + clustering + impairment questions\n\nFormat: Self-report\n\nCompletion Time: 3–5 minutes\n",{"title":522,"slug":523,"path":524,"summary":525,"categoryTitle":15},"Multidimensional Inventory of Dissociation (MID) : Clinician Scoring Guide","mid","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fmultidimensional-inventory-of-dissociation-v6-mid","The MID (Version 6.0) is a comprehensive self-report measure designed to assess pathological dissociation across a wide range of symptoms, experiences, and internal phenomena. Developed by Paul F. Dell, PhD, the MID evaluates both severity and structure of dissociative experiences, including amnesia, depersonalization, derealization, identity alteration, voice hearing, trance states, and other dissociative phenomena commonly seen in trauma-related disorders. It produces 23 primary clinical scales, 10 validity indices, and two global summary scores: DIS-S (Severity of Dissociation) and DIS-T (Trait Dissociation). The MID is one of the most detailed dissociation assessments available and is frequently used in complex trauma, OSDD, and DID evaluations. Interpretation requires clinical expertise.",{"title":527,"slug":528,"path":529,"summary":530,"categoryTitle":121},"Narcissism Test (NPI-16)","narcissism-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fnarcissism-test","Free narcissism test using the NPI-16 (Narcissistic Personality Inventory - 16 item). Measures grandiose narcissistic traits (0–16). Also covers covert\u002Fvulnerable narcissism, 9 DSM-5-TR NPD criteria, and narcissism assessment tools. Ames et al. (2006).",{"title":532,"slug":533,"path":534,"summary":535,"categoryTitle":104},"OCD Test (OCI-R)","ocd-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Focd-test","Free OCD test using the validated OCI-R (Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory - Revised). 18 questions across 6 OCD symptom dimensions: Washing, Obsessing, Hoarding, Ordering, Checking, Neutralizing. Score ≥21 suggests clinically significant OCD. Foa et al. (2002).",{"title":537,"slug":538,"path":539,"summary":540,"categoryTitle":541},"OCI-R: Obsessive-Compulsive Inventory-Revised","oci-r","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Foci-r","18-item OCD severity measure across six subscales: washing, obsessing, hoarding, ordering, checking, neutralizing. Clinical cutoff ≥21. Free for clinical use. Foa et al., 2002.","OCD",{"title":543,"slug":544,"path":545,"summary":546,"categoryTitle":54},"PANAS: Positive and Negative Affect Schedule","panas","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpanas","20-item validated measure of positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA). Each subscale 10–50. Low PA associated with depression; high NA with anxiety. Public domain. Watson et al. (1988).",{"title":548,"slug":549,"path":550,"summary":551,"categoryTitle":54},"PANSS (Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale)","panss","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpanss","30-item clinician-rated schizophrenia severity scale: Positive (7), Negative (7), General Psychopathology (16) subscales. Score 30–210. Primary antipsychotic clinical trial endpoint. Kay, Fiszbein & Opler (1987).",{"title":553,"slug":554,"path":555,"summary":556,"categoryTitle":303},"PCL-5: PTSD Checklist for DSM-5-TR","pcl-5","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpcl-5","A validated 20-item self-report measure assessing the 20 DSM-5-TR symptoms of PTSD over the past month.",{"title":558,"slug":559,"path":560,"summary":561,"categoryTitle":15},"PHQ-15 (Patient Health Questionnaire-15)","phq-15-patient-health-questionnaire-15","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fphq-15-patient-health-questionnaire-15","The PHQ-15 is a brief, validated measure of somatic symptom severity commonly used in primary care, mental health, and integrated behavioral health settings. Developed as part of the broader Patient Health Questionnaire suite, the PHQ-15 quantifies the burden of physical symptoms that may be associated with anxiety, depression, stress, or somatic symptom disorders. \n\nIts scoring system provides a clear indicator of symptom load, helping clinicians identify when somatic concerns may be clinically significant or require further assessment. While not diagnostic, the PHQ-15 is a practical tool for monitoring symptom intensity and guiding conversations around functional impairment, medical workup, and mind–body interactions.\n\nType: Somatic symptom severity scale\n\nPopulation: Adults (18+)\n\nLength: 15 items\n\nFormat: Self-report\n\nCompletion Time: 3–5 minutes\n",{"title":563,"slug":564,"path":565,"summary":566,"categoryTitle":54},"PHQ-15: Patient Health Questionnaire Somatic Symptoms","phq-15","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fphq-15","15-item somatic symptom severity scale from the PHQ family. Score 0–30 across four bands: minimal, low, medium, high. Widely used for somatic symptom burden screening.",{"title":568,"slug":569,"path":570,"summary":571,"categoryTitle":110},"PHQ-2 Depression Screener (Patient Health Questionnaire-2)","phq-2","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fphq-2","2-item ultra-brief depression screener. Score ≥3 indicates need for full PHQ-9 evaluation.",{"title":573,"slug":574,"path":575,"summary":576,"categoryTitle":577},"PHQ-8: Patient Health Questionnaire – Depression Scale","phq-8","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fphq-8","An 8-item self-report measure of depression severity derived from the PHQ-9 by omitting the suicidality item. Validated for population-based research and clinical settings where suicidal ideation screening is conducted separately.","Depression & Mood",{"title":579,"slug":580,"path":581,"summary":582,"categoryTitle":110},"PHQ-9: Patient Health Questionnaire-9","phq-9","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fphq-9","Standard instrument for screening, monitoring and measuring the severity of depression. 9-item scale aligned with DSM-5-TR criteria.",{"title":584,"slug":585,"path":586,"summary":587,"categoryTitle":110},"PHQ-A (Adolescent Depression Screener)","phq-a","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fphq-a","9-item depression screening tool adapted from the PHQ-9 for adolescents ages 11–17. Score 0–27; ≥10 moderate depression. Item 9 screens for suicidal ideation. Endorsed by AAP. Public domain. Johnson et al. (2002).",{"title":589,"slug":590,"path":591,"summary":592,"categoryTitle":437},"PSQI: Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index","psqi","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpsqi","19-item self-report measure of sleep quality over the past month. Seven component scores yield a global PSQI score; ≥5 indicates poor sleep quality. Widely used in clinical research.",{"title":594,"slug":595,"path":596,"summary":597,"categoryTitle":54},"PSS: Perceived Stress Scale","pss","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpss","10-item measure of perceived stress — the degree to which situations feel uncontrollable, unpredictable, and overwhelming. Score 0–40 across three bands: low, moderate, high. Cohen, Kamarck & Mermelstein (1983).",{"title":599,"slug":600,"path":601,"summary":602,"categoryTitle":93},"PSWQ: Penn State Worry Questionnaire","pswq","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpswq","16-item measure of pathological worry. Score 16–80; ≥60 indicates high worry\u002FGAD range. Reverse-scored items. Best free STAI-T equivalent for trait anxiety. Public domain. Meyer et al. (1990).",{"title":604,"slug":605,"path":606,"summary":607,"categoryTitle":54},"Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS): Scoring and Clinical Cutoffs","pain-catastrophizing-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpain-catastrophizing-scale","13-item validated measure of pain catastrophizing (rumination, magnification, helplessness). Score 0–52; ≥30 clinically significant. Strong predictor of pain disability and opioid use. Sullivan et al. (1995).",{"title":609,"slug":610,"path":611,"summary":612,"categoryTitle":37},"Pain Medication Questionnaire (PMQ)","pmq","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpmq","PMQ scoring guide. Pain Medication Questionnaire — 26-item opioid misuse risk screen for chronic pain. Score ≥23 = elevated risk. Adams et al. 2004.",{"title":614,"slug":615,"path":616,"summary":617,"categoryTitle":618},"Parenting Stress Test","parenting-stress-index","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fparenting-stress-index","Understand how much parenting stress you're carrying and where it's coming from. Includes PSI-SF interpreter.","Parenting",{"title":620,"slug":621,"path":622,"summary":623,"categoryTitle":181},"Perceived Stress Scale","perceived-stress-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fperceived-stress-scale","Take the criterion-standard PSS-10 to measure how stressed you've felt over the past month. Developed by Sheldon Cohen, used in thousands of research studies worldwide.",{"title":625,"slug":626,"path":627,"summary":628,"categoryTitle":629},"Personality Disorder Test (DSM-5-TR Guide)","personality-disorder-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpersonality-disorder-test","DSM-5-TR 3-cluster framework: 10 personality disorders across Cluster A (odd\u002Feccentric), Cluster B (dramatic\u002Femotional), and Cluster C (anxious\u002Ffearful). Interactive cluster explorer, SCID-5-PD\u002FMCMI-IV\u002FPAI comparison.","Personality Disorder Assessment",{"title":631,"slug":632,"path":633,"summary":634,"categoryTitle":15},"Prescreen: DSM-5-TR Self-Rated Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptom Measure : Adult","dsm-5-tr-self-rated-level-1-cross-cutting-symptom-measure-adult","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fdsm-5-tr-self-rated-level-1-cross-cutting-symptom-measure-adult","The DSM-5-TR Self-Rated Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptom Measure, Adult is a 23-item transdiagnostic screener developed by the American Psychiatric Association (APA) to identify clinically relevant symptoms across 15 mental health domains. It provides a rapid, whole-person view of symptom patterns that may require more targeted follow-up. \n\nThe measure does not yield a total score; each domain is interpreted individually. A rating of 2 or higher (Moderate\u002FSevere) within any domain suggests the need for focused assessment. The instrument is not diagnostic and is intended as a first-line screener for triage and monitoring.\n\nType: Transdiagnostic mental health symptom screener\n\nPopulation: Adults (18+)\n\nLength: 23 items across 15 domains\n\nFormat: Self-report\n\nCompletion Time: 5–10 minutes\n",{"title":636,"slug":637,"path":638,"summary":639,"categoryTitle":15},"Primary Care PTSD Screen for DSM-5-TR (PC-PTSD-5)","primary-care-ptsd-screen-pc-ptsd-5","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fprimary-care-ptsd-screen-pc-ptsd-5","The PC-PTSD-5 is a brief, highly sensitive screening instrument designed to identify probable PTSD in primary care and general medical settings. Developed by Prins, Bovin, Smolenski, and colleagues (2016), this 5-item tool reflects DSM-5-TR PTSD criteria and focuses on intrusion, avoidance, cognitive\u002Fmood changes, and arousal. Its simplicity allows rapid identification of individuals who may benefit from a fuller diagnostic evaluation. A score of 3 or more “Yes” responses is the recommended threshold for a positive screen. The PC-PTSD-5 is widely used in primary care, VA systems, and community health settings due to its accuracy, brevity, and clinical practicality.",{"title":641,"slug":642,"path":643,"summary":644,"categoryTitle":121},"Psychopathy Test (PCL-R): 20-Item Scoring Guide + Cutoff ≥30","psychopathy-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fpsychopathy-test","Educational guide to the PCL-R psychopathy test (Hare Psychopathy Checklist-Revised). 20 items, scored 0–2 each, total 0–40. North America forensic cutoff ≥30; UK\u002FEurope ≥25. Two-factor model (Interpersonal\u002FAffective + Social Deviance) plus TriPM and LSRP context. Hare (1991).",{"title":646,"slug":647,"path":648,"summary":649,"categoryTitle":650},"QIDS-SR (Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology)","qids-sr","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fqids-sr","QIDS-SR16: 16-item depression self-report, score 0–27. Covers all 9 DSM criteria. Domain-based scoring: sleep, mood, appetite, concentration. STAR*D trial.","Depression Assessment",{"title":652,"slug":653,"path":654,"summary":655,"categoryTitle":26},"RAADS-R Test: 80-Item Adult Autism Screen + Scoring (Cutoff ≥65)","raads-r","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fraads-r","RAADS-R test (Ritvo Autism Asperger Diagnostic Scale-Revised): 80-item self-report adult autism screen. Cutoff ≥65 indicates autism traits warrant clinical evaluation. Four subscales: Language, Social Relatedness, Sensory\u002FMotor, Circumscribed Interests. Ritvo et al. (2011). Educational only — not a diagnosis.",{"title":657,"slug":658,"path":659,"summary":660,"categoryTitle":426},"RTW-SE: Return-to-Work Self-Efficacy Questionnaire","rtw-se","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Frtw-se","An 11-item self-report measure assessing a worker's confidence in their ability to return to work while managing health-related symptoms. Used in occupational rehabilitation and sick-leave management for anxiety, depression, and chronic pain.",{"title":662,"slug":663,"path":664,"summary":665,"categoryTitle":666},"Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria Test","rejection-sensitive-dysphoria-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Frejection-sensitive-dysphoria-test","Explore rejection sensitive dysphoria (RSD) — intense emotional pain from perceived rejection — with a symptom questionnaire and ADHD clinical guide.","ADHD & Neurodevelopmental",{"title":668,"slug":669,"path":670,"summary":671,"categoryTitle":54},"Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale","rosenberg-self-esteem-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Frosenberg-self-esteem-scale","10-item self-report measure of global self-esteem. Developed by Morris Rosenberg (1965). Score 10–40; widely used in clinical research and treatment outcome tracking.",{"title":673,"slug":674,"path":675,"summary":676,"categoryTitle":677},"SCARED (Child Anxiety Screen)","scared","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fscared","SCARED anxiety scale calculator for children and adolescents: 41-item screener covering Panic, GAD, Separation Anxiety, Social Anxiety, and School Avoidance. Score ≥25 indicates possible anxiety disorder.","Pediatric Anxiety Screening",{"title":679,"slug":680,"path":681,"summary":682,"categoryTitle":683},"SCARED-P: Screen for Child Anxiety Related Disorders – Parent Version","scared-p","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fscared-p","A 41-item parent-report version of the SCARED that assesses anxiety disorder symptoms in children and adolescents as observed by caregivers. Parallel to the child self-report SCARED; used together for multi-informant anxiety assessment.","Anxiety & Related Disorders",{"title":685,"slug":686,"path":687,"summary":688,"categoryTitle":15},"SCOFF Questionnaire","scoff-questionnaire","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fscoff-questionnaire","The SCOFF is a five-item screening tool designed to identify possible cases of anorexia nervosa and bulimia nervosa. It is brief, easy to administer, and widely used in primary care and mental health settings to flag disordered eating behaviours.\n\nThe SCOFF Questionnaire is a simple, five-question tool designed to identify potential eating disorders. It's useful for healthcare professionals to quickly assess individuals who may be at risk. - included with HiBoop\n",{"title":685,"slug":690,"path":691,"summary":692,"categoryTitle":693},"scoff","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fscoff","SCOFF online scoring — 5-item eating disorder screener for anorexia and bulimia nervosa. Cutoff ≥2; sensitivity 85%. Morgan, Reid & Lacey, 1999.","Eating Disorders",{"title":695,"slug":696,"path":697,"summary":698,"categoryTitle":37},"SOGS: South Oaks Gambling Screen","sogs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fsogs","A 20-item self-report screening tool for pathological gambling, developed by Lesieur & Blume (1987). Scores ≥5 indicate probable pathological gambling. Widely used in both clinical and research settings.",{"title":700,"slug":701,"path":702,"summary":703,"categoryTitle":93},"SPIN: Social Phobia Inventory","spin","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fspin","17-item self-report measure for social anxiety disorder. Screens fear, avoidance, and physiological symptoms. Score 0–68; clinical cutoff ≥19.",{"title":705,"slug":706,"path":707,"summary":708,"categoryTitle":93},"STAI: State-Trait Anxiety Inventory","state-trait-anxiety-inventory","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fstate-trait-anxiety-inventory","Two 20-item anxiety scales: State (STAI-S) and Trait (STAI-T). Scores 20–80 per subscale; ≥40 clinical concern. Copyrighted by Pearson. Spielberger et al. (1983). Score interpreter and free alternatives guide.",{"title":710,"slug":711,"path":712,"summary":713,"categoryTitle":714},"SWAN: Strengths and Weaknesses of ADHD Symptoms and Normal Behavior Scale","swan","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fswan","An 18-item dimensional rating scale assessing ADHD symptoms in the context of normal behavioral variation. Rated on a bipolar scale from far below average to far above average. Appropriate for children, adolescents, and adults; available in parent, teacher, and self-report formats.","ADHD & Attention",{"title":716,"slug":717,"path":718,"summary":719,"categoryTitle":720},"SWLS (Satisfaction with Life Scale)","swls","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fswls","SWLS: 5-item global life satisfaction scale, score 5–35 across seven interpretation bands. Items rated 1–7. Diener et al. (1985).","Life Satisfaction Assessment",{"title":722,"slug":723,"path":724,"summary":725,"categoryTitle":726},"Schizophrenia Test (Symptoms & PANSS Guide)","schizophrenia-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fschizophrenia-test","Educational guide to schizophrenia spectrum disorders. Three symptom domains (positive, negative, cognitive), DSM-5-TR criteria, spectrum disorder comparison, and PANSS\u002FBPRS assessment tools.","Psychosis & Schizophrenia Spectrum",{"title":728,"slug":729,"path":730,"summary":731,"categoryTitle":732},"Self-Esteem Test (Rosenberg Scale)","self-esteem-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fself-esteem-test","Interactive Rosenberg Self-Esteem Scale (RSES) calculator, 0–30. Normal range 15–25; below 15 = low self-esteem. Public domain. Rosenberg (1965). Includes correlates and CBT\u002FACT building approaches.","Self-Esteem & Well-Being",{"title":734,"slug":735,"path":736,"summary":737,"categoryTitle":738},"Sensory Processing Measure","sensory-processing-measure","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fsensory-processing-measure","The SPM is a standardized caregiver\u002Fteacher-rated sensory processing assessment for children ages 5–12. Eight T-score scales: Social Participation, Vision, Hearing, Touch, Proprioception, Vestibular, Praxis, and Total. T≥70 indicates definite dysfunction. Miller Kuhaneck et al. (2007).","Sensory & Developmental",{"title":740,"slug":741,"path":742,"summary":743,"categoryTitle":744},"Social Anxiety Test (SPIN Score Guide)","social-anxiety-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fsocial-anxiety-test","SPIN score interpreter (≥19 = SAD screen positive). Social Anxiety Disorder guide covering DSM-5-TR criteria, SPIN vs LSAS comparison, and CBT\u002FSSRI treatment overview.","Anxiety Disorder Screening",{"title":746,"slug":747,"path":748,"summary":749,"categoryTitle":15},"Suicidal Ideation Attributes Scale (SIDAS)","suicidal-ideation-attributes-scale-sidas","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fsuicidal-ideation-attributes-scale-sidas","The SIDAS is a 5-item self-report tool used to assess the severity and functional impact of suicidal thoughts. It was developed to support early identification and risk monitoring in community and clinical settings, particularly among individuals experiencing depression or distress.\n\nThe Suicidal Ideation Attributes Scale (SIDAS) is an assessment tool designed to measure the severity of suicidal thoughts. It is intended for individuals experiencing suicidal ideation and is useful for mental health professionals to evaluate risk levels and plan interventions.\n",{"title":751,"slug":752,"path":753,"summary":754,"categoryTitle":54},"TAS-20: Toronto Alexithymia Scale","tas-20","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Ftas-20","20-item measure of alexithymia — difficulty identifying and describing feelings. Score 20–100; ≥61 indicates alexithymia. Three subscales: DIF, DDF, EOT. Bagby, Parker & Taylor (1994).",{"title":756,"slug":757,"path":758,"summary":759,"categoryTitle":15},"Tobacco, Alcohol, Prescription medications, and other Substance use Tool (TAPS)","tobacco-alcohol-prescription-medications-and-other-substance-use-tool-taps","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Ftobacco-alcohol-prescription-medications-and-other-substance-use-tool-taps","The TAPS Tool is a two-part screening and brief assessment instrument used to identify substance use and substance use disorders in adults. It covers tobacco, alcohol, prescription medications, and illicit drugs, and is designed for use in primary care and general medical settings.\n\nThe TAPS tool assesses the use of tobacco, alcohol, prescription medications, and other substances. It's designed for healthcare providers to identify and address substance use in patients effectively.\n",{"title":761,"slug":762,"path":763,"summary":764,"categoryTitle":303},"Trauma Test (PC-PTSD-5)","trauma-test","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Ftrauma-test","Free trauma screener using the PC-PTSD-5 (Primary Care PTSD Screen for DSM-5-TR). 5 yes\u002Fno questions covering re-experiencing, avoidance, negative mood, hyperarousal, and numbing. Positive screen ≥3. Links to full PCL-5. Prins et al. (2016).",{"title":766,"slug":767,"path":768,"summary":769,"categoryTitle":54},"UCLA Loneliness Scale","ucla-loneliness-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fucla-loneliness-scale","20-item measure of subjective loneliness and social isolation. Score 20–80. Most widely used loneliness measure in research. Russell (1996).",{"title":771,"slug":772,"path":773,"summary":774,"categoryTitle":26},"Vanderbilt ADHD Assessment Scale (NICHQ): Parent + Teacher Forms, Scoring Guide","nichq-vanderbilt","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fnichq-vanderbilt","Vanderbilt ADHD assessment scoring guide — the AAP-endorsed NICHQ parent (55-item) and teacher (43-item) rating forms for children ages 6–12. Includes the four DSM-5-TR ADHD subtype cutoffs and Initial vs Follow-Up forms.",{"title":776,"slug":777,"path":778,"summary":779,"categoryTitle":54},"WHODAS 2.0: World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule","whodas-2","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fwhodas-2","36-item World Health Organization measure of health and disability across six life domains: Cognition, Mobility, Self-care, Getting Along, Life Activities, and Participation. DSM-5-TR endorsed.",{"title":781,"slug":782,"path":783,"summary":784,"categoryTitle":785},"WSAS (Work and Social Adjustment Scale)","wsas","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fwsas","Work and Social Adjustment Scale (WSAS): 5-item measure of functional impairment due to mental health problems. Score 0–40. Cutoffs: \u003C10 subclinical, 10–20 moderate, >20 severe impairment.","Functional Impairment Screening",{"title":787,"slug":788,"path":789,"summary":790,"categoryTitle":26},"WURS-61: Wender Utah Rating Scale","wurs-61","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fwurs-61","Retrospective childhood ADHD assessment. Adults rate symptoms from ages 5–10 to establish the early onset required for a DSM-5-TR ADHD diagnosis.",{"title":792,"slug":793,"path":794,"summary":795,"categoryTitle":15},"Weiss Functional Impairment Rating Scale (WFIRS)","wfirs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fweiss-functional-impairment-rating-scale-wfirs","The WFIRS is a tool designed to assess functional impairment across multiple life domains in individuals with ADHD and other psychiatric conditions. It helps clinicians understand how symptoms impact day-to-day functioning in areas such as school, work, relationships, and self-concept.\n\nThe Weiss Functional Impairment Rating Scale (WFIRS) assesses functional impairment in individuals, providing insights for treatment planning.\n",{"title":797,"slug":798,"path":799,"summary":800,"categoryTitle":15},"Wender Utah Rating Scale for ADHD - 25 WURS-25","wurs-25","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fwender-utah-rating-scale-for-adhd-25-wurs-25","The WURS-25 is a widely used 25-item self-report screener designed to assess childhood ADHD symptoms retrospectively in adults. Adapted from the original 61-item Wender Utah Rating Scale, the WURS-25 focuses on the most predictive behavioral and emotional indicators of childhood ADHD, including impulsivity, inattention, mood regulation, and difficulty with schoolwork. Respondents rate how much each item applied to them as a child, producing a total score from 0–100. A score of 46 or higher is the validated cutoff that suggests a positive screen for childhood ADHD. Importantly, the WURS-25 is not diagnostic; it provides historical context that supports, but does not replace, full ADHD assessment in adulthood.",{"title":802,"slug":803,"path":804,"summary":805,"categoryTitle":15},"World Health Organization Quality of Life – BREF (WHOQOL-BREF)","who-quality-of-life-bref-whoqol-bref","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fwho-quality-of-life-bref-whoqol-bref","The WHOQOL-BREF is a 26-item self-report instrument developed by the World Health Organization to assess overall quality of life and subjective wellbeing across four key domains: physical health, psychological health, social relationships, and environment. It is used internationally in clinical, public health, and research settings.\n\nThe WHOQOL-BREF is an assessment tool that measures quality of life across various domains. It is designed for individuals seeking to evaluate their well-being and is useful for identifying areas for improvement.\n",{"title":807,"slug":808,"path":809,"summary":810,"categoryTitle":209},"Y-BOCS (Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale)","y-bocs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fy-bocs","Y-BOCS scoring guide: 10-item clinician-administered OCD severity scale. Two subscales — Obsessions (0–20) and Compulsions (0–20). Total score 0–40. Severity cutoffs: 0–7 subclinical, 8–15 mild, 16–23 moderate, 24–31 severe, 32–40 extreme. Goodman et al. (1989).",{"title":812,"slug":813,"path":814,"summary":815,"categoryTitle":104},"Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale","yale-brown-obsessive-compulsive-scale","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fyale-brown-obsessive-compulsive-scale","The Y-BOCS is the criterion-standard 10-item clinician-administered OCD severity scale with Obsession and Compulsion subscales (0–20 each), total 0–40. Response criterion ≥35% reduction; remission ≤12. Goodman et al. (1989).",{"title":817,"slug":818,"path":819,"summary":820,"categoryTitle":494},"Young Mania Rating Scale (YMRS): Scoring and Cutoffs","ymrs","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fymrs","11-item clinician-rated scale measuring manic episode severity. Score 0–60; ≤11 remission, 12–25 mild, 26–37 moderate, ≥38 severe. Criterion-standard outcome measure in bipolar disorder treatment.",{"title":822,"slug":823,"path":824,"summary":825,"categoryTitle":110},"Zung SDS: Self-Rating Depression Scale","zung","\u002Fhelp\u002Fassessment-library\u002Fzung","20-item classic depression scale. SDS Index 25–100; ≥50 indicates depression. Covers affective, somatic, psychomotor, and psychological symptoms. Public domain. Zung (1965).",1778772403808]