
Expressed Emotion about children: reliability and validity of a Camberwell Family Interview for Childhood (CFI‐C)
Author(s) -
Scott Stephen,
Campbell Caroline
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
international journal of methods in psychiatric research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.275
H-Index - 73
eISSN - 1557-0657
pISSN - 1049-8931
DOI - 10.1002/mpr.75
Subject(s) - hostility , discriminant validity , kappa , psychology , expressed emotion , clinical psychology , psychiatry , test validity , validity , criterion validity , psychometrics , construct validity , linguistics , philosophy , internal consistency
A Camberwell Family Interview for Childhood (CFI‐C) was developed by adding questions about the family impact of the child's problems to a semi‐structured interview on child psychiatric symptoms. The whole CFI‐C took under an hour to administer; the questions about family impact added 15–20 minutes. The inter‐rater reliability was good (kappa 0.64–1.0). Mothers of 25 boys aged four to nine years referred with disruptive behaviour, and 25 matched controls were interviewed twice in five months. Test‐retest stability was fair to good (kappa 0.36–1.0). Discriminant validity between referred and control samples was strong for critical comments, positive comments and warmth, but not significant for emotional overinvolvement or hostility. The same three scales showed strong discriminant validity between child symptom domains, being strongly correlated with conduct symptoms (kappa = 0.49–0.71) but not emotional symptoms (kappa = 0.10–0.17). Sensitivity to change with treatment was shown by a reduction in the mean number of critical comments from 4.7 to 2.9, an increase in positive comments from 2.3 to 3.9, and an increased score on the warmth scale from 2.1 to 2.6. The CFI‐C is a useful instrument for the study of the relationship between parenting style and child psychiatric symptoms. Copyright © 2000 Whurr Publishers Ltd.