PTSD Checklist Civilian Version (PCL-C)
Alternate Names: PTSD DSM V Checklist
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PTSD Checklist Civilian Version (PCL-C)
A self-report measure of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder consisting of 17 5-point likert scale items as developed by the National Center for PTDS and as found in the DSM-IV.
PTSD Checklist for DSM V (PCL-5)
A self-report measure of Post Traumatic Stress Disorder consisting of 20 5-point likert scale items as developed by the National Center for PTDS and as found in the DSM-V.
References
Andrykowski, M., Cordova, M., Studts, J., Miller, T., & Kendall, Philip C. (1998). Posttraumatic Stress Disorder After Treatment for Breast Cancer: Prevalence of Diagnosis and Use of the PTSD Checklist—Civilian Version (PCL–C) as a Screening Instrument. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 66(3), 586-590.
Smith, M., Redd, W., DuHamel, K., Vickberg, S., & Ricketts, P. (1999). Validation of the PTSD checklist–civilian version in survivors of bone marrow transplantation. Journal of Traumatic Stress, 12(3), 485-499.
Conybeare, D., Behar, E., Solomon, A., Newman, M., & Borkovec, T. (2012). The PTSD Checklist-Civilian Version: Reliability, validity, and factor structure in a nonclinical sample. Journal of Clinical Psychology, 68(6), 699-713.
Fodor, Pozen, Ntaganira, Sezibera, & Neugebauer. (2015). The factor structure of posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms among Rwandans exposed to the 1994 genocide: A confirmatory factor analytic study using the PCL-C. Journal of Anxiety Disorders, 32, 8-16.
Martinez, M., & Wong, Edwin S. (2016). A combined analysis of two randomized controlled trials evaluating the effect of mindfulness-based stress reduction on self-reported emotional experience and physiological symptoms among veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder. Seattle]: University of Washington.