Objectives: The present study extracted symptom profiles based on parent and youth report on a broad symptom checklist. Profiles based on parent-reported symptoms were compared to those based on adolescent self-report to clarify discrepancies.
Method: The current study used archival data from 1,269 youth and parent dyads whose youth received services at a community mental health center. The mean age of the sample was 14.31 years (standard deviation = 1.98), and the youth sample was half male (50.1%) and primarily Caucasian (86.8%). Latent profile analysis was used to extract models based on parent and self-reported emotional and behavioral problems.
Results: Results indicated that a 5-class solution was the best fitting model for youth-reported symptoms and an adequate fit for parent-reported symptoms. For 46.5% of the sample, class membership matched for both parent and youth.
Conclusion: Latent profile analysis provides an alternative method for exploring transdiagnostic subgroups within clinic-referred samples.
Keywords: Ohio Scales; latent profile analysis; person-centered analysis; reporter discrepancies; symptom profiles; transdiagnostic.
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