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The NetSCID-5 is an online version of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5, developed and marketed in consultation with the SCID-5 authors by TeleSage, Inc. in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. [1]
NetSCID-5 is offered as an online service with user accounts and payment per-administration. Diagnoses and response data are made available in the form of reports and raw data download.
TeleSage currently offers the NetSCID-5 in Research, Clinician, and Personality Disorders versions. The content (e.g. text, branching and scoring) of each of these instruments is intended to match the corresponding paper version.
Initial development was funded by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health. Public availability was announced June 30, 2017. [2]
The NetSCID-5 has been used in clinical studies, such as:
Training on the use of the NetSCID-5 has been offered by independent organizations. [6]
Experience with NetSCID-5 has been listed as a qualification in job postings. [7]
Computerized versions of mental health interviews has been suggested by some research to result in fewer branching and scoring errors compared to pencil-and-paper versions of the same instruments. [8]
An electronic versions of the SCID-5 instrument is also offered with eInterview from Sunilion Software [9] [10]
This article has multiple issues. Please help
improve it or discuss these issues on the
talk page. (
Learn how and when to remove these template messages)
|
The NetSCID-5 is an online version of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5, developed and marketed in consultation with the SCID-5 authors by TeleSage, Inc. in Chapel Hill, North Carolina. [1]
NetSCID-5 is offered as an online service with user accounts and payment per-administration. Diagnoses and response data are made available in the form of reports and raw data download.
TeleSage currently offers the NetSCID-5 in Research, Clinician, and Personality Disorders versions. The content (e.g. text, branching and scoring) of each of these instruments is intended to match the corresponding paper version.
Initial development was funded by a grant from the National Institute of Mental Health. Public availability was announced June 30, 2017. [2]
The NetSCID-5 has been used in clinical studies, such as:
Training on the use of the NetSCID-5 has been offered by independent organizations. [6]
Experience with NetSCID-5 has been listed as a qualification in job postings. [7]
Computerized versions of mental health interviews has been suggested by some research to result in fewer branching and scoring errors compared to pencil-and-paper versions of the same instruments. [8]
An electronic versions of the SCID-5 instrument is also offered with eInterview from Sunilion Software [9] [10]