Glascoe F P, Byrne K E, Ashford L G, Johnson K L, Chang B, Strickland B
Department of Pediatrics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, TN.
Pediatrics. 1992 Jun;89(6 Pt 2):1221-5.
One of the oldest and best known developmental screening tests was recently restandardized and revised as the Denver-II. Because it was published without evidence of its accuracy, the present study was undertaken with 104 children between 3 and 72 months of age attending one of five day-care centers. To determine the presence of developmental problems, children were administered individual measures of intelligence, speech-language, achievement, and adaptive behavior. A second psychological examiner, blind to the outcome of the diagnostic battery, administered the Denver-II. Developmental problems including language impairments, learning disabilities, mild mental retardation, and/or functional developmental delay were found in 17% of the children. The Denver-II identified correctly 83% and thus had high rates of sensitivity. However, more than half the children with normal development also received abnormal, questionable, or untestable Denver-II scores. Thus the test had limited specificity (43%) and a high overreferral rate. The alternative scoring method, categorizing questionable/untestable scores as normal, caused sensitivity to drop to 56% although specificity rose to 80%. Since neither scoring method produced acceptable levels of accuracy, an effort was made to locate the sources of accuracy and inaccuracy within the test. Only items in the language domain were modestly helpful in discriminating children with and without difficulties. The findings suggest that the authors of the Denver-II need to engage in further development of the instrument including revising scoring criteria and item placement in relation to children's ages. In the interim, test users should employ screening tests which are more accurate such as the Minnesota Inventories or the Battelle Developmental Inventory Screening Test.
最古老且最知名的发育筛查测试之一最近被重新标准化并修订为丹佛发育筛查测验第二版(Denver-II)。由于该测试在发表时没有准确性证据,本研究对来自五个日托中心之一的104名3至72个月大的儿童进行了调查。为了确定是否存在发育问题,对儿童进行了智力、言语语言、学业成绩和适应性行为的个体测量。另一位对诊断测试结果不知情的心理测试员对儿童进行了丹佛发育筛查测验第二版测试。在17%的儿童中发现了发育问题,包括语言障碍、学习障碍、轻度智力低下和/或功能性发育迟缓。丹佛发育筛查测验第二版正确识别出83%的问题,因此具有较高的敏感度。然而,超过一半发育正常的儿童也得到了异常、可疑或无法测试的丹佛发育筛查测验第二版分数。因此,该测试的特异性有限(43%),转诊率很高。将可疑/无法测试的分数归类为正常的替代评分方法,虽然特异性提高到了80%,但敏感度降至56%。由于两种评分方法都没有产生可接受的准确性水平,因此努力在测试中找出准确和不准确的来源。只有语言领域的项目在区分有困难和没有困难的儿童方面有一定帮助。研究结果表明,丹佛发育筛查测验第二版的作者需要进一步改进该工具,包括修订评分标准和根据儿童年龄调整项目安排。在此期间,测试使用者应采用更准确的筛查测试,如明尼苏达量表或贝特尔发育量表筛查测试。