1. Symptom Checklist SCL-90 is one of the most famous mental health test scales in the world, and it is the most widely used mental disorder and mental illness outpatient examination scale at present. It will help you understand your mental health from ten aspects. This test is suitable for people over 16 years old.
2. Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL-90), also known as self-report scale, is sometimes called Hopkin Symptom List (HSCL, written by the same person before SCL-90, the earliest version of HCSL was compiled in 1954). Compiled by L.R. derogatory 1975, the scale * * * has 90 items, covering a wide range of mental symptoms, from feeling, emotion, thinking, consciousness and behavior to living habits, interpersonal relationships, diet and sleep, etc. And 10 factors were used to reflect 10 aspects of psychological symptoms.
Third, this test is suitable for adults (16 years old or older). The purpose of this test is to evaluate whether a person has some psychological symptoms and their severity from the perspectives of feeling, emotion, thinking, consciousness, behavior, living habits, interpersonal relationship, diet and sleep. It has a good ability to distinguish people with psychological symptoms (that is, people who may be on the edge of psychological barriers). It is suitable for testing those who may have psychological barriers in a group, what kind of psychological barriers someone may have and how serious they are. Not suitable for mania and schizophrenia. This test can not only self-test, but also check others (such as their abnormal behavior, the possibility of suffering from mental illness or mental illness). If the score is found to be high, further screening should be carried out.
IV. The factor score * * * includes 10 factors, that is, all 90 items are divided into 10 categories. Each factor reflects a certain aspect of the patient's situation, so we can understand the symptom distribution characteristics of the patient through the factor score and analyze the general situation.
Fifth, generally speaking, it refers to the level of self-symptom evaluation from "none" to "serious". The score of the total symptom index is between 1 and 1.5, indicating that the subject has no symptoms listed in the scale. 1.5~2.5, indicating that the subject feels a little symptom, but it does not happen frequently; Between 2.5 and 3.5, it means that the subjects feel symptoms, and the severity is mild to moderate; Between 3.5 and 4.5, it means that the subject feels symptoms, and the degree is moderate to severe; Between 4.5 and 5, it means that the subjects feel that the frequency and intensity of symptoms are very serious.