ASEBA BPM/18-59™

Brief Problem Monitor for Ages 18-59™

For normed multi-informant assessment of adults’ functioning & responses to interventions (RTIs)

The BPM/18-59 form is available on ASEBA-Web (English and languages listed)

The BPM/18-59 Scales

The BPM’s Internalizing (INT), Attention Problems (ATT), Externalizing (EXT), and Total Problems (TOT) scales comprise items from the Adult Self-Report (ASR) and the Adult Behavior Checklist (ABCL). The items, scales, and norms are based on decades of research and practical experience, as summarized in the BPM Manual/18-59 (Achenbach & Ivanova, 2018).

Linking Brief Assessments with Comprehensive Assessments

Frequent brief assessments are often needed to evaluate responses to interventions designed to reduce problems and improve adaptive functioning. Brief assessments are also needed to monitor functioning in inpatient, partial hospitalization, and residential facilities. To optimize their value, brief assessments must be closely linked to comprehensive initial assessments for pinpointing specific needs and for designing interventions. Brief assessments should also be closely linked to comprehensive outcome assessments for evaluating post-intervention functioning. The BPM/18-59 counterparts of ASR and ABCL items and scales enable users to link BPM/18-59 assessments closely with the more comprehensive initial and outcome assessments afforded by the ASR and ABCL.

Cross-Informant Comparisons

Because people’s behavior often varies from one context and interaction partner to another, brief assessments should compare data from multiple informants. The BPM/18-59 enables users to obtain collateral- and self-ratings. The BPM/18-59 software makes it easy to compare item ratings and scale scores obtained from multiple informants. The software compares item ratings and scale scores from up to 4 informants on each rating occasion. (See BPM/18-59 Cross Informant Sample.pdf)

Trajectories of Scale Scores

To document the course of BPM/18-59 scale scores across multiple rating occasions, the software displays trajectory graphs of scale scores obtained from each rater on up to 10 occasions. (See BPM/18-59 Trajectory Sample.pdf)

The Importance of Norms

Scale scores cannot be properly interpreted without considering scores obtained by a person’s peers based on collateral- and self-ratings. For each scale, the BPM/18-59 software displays T scores based on norms for the person’s gender, age group, and the type of informant (self (“O” for “Other”) or collateral “S” for “Self”)). Equally important, multicultural options enable users to select norms for dozens of societies. T scores > 65 (93rd percentile for the relevant norm group) are marked on the bar graphs and trajectories as being high enough to be of concern. In addition to providing scale scores, the BPM/18-59 software thus alerts users to scores that warrant special attention.

Rater Comments & User-Specified Items

Raters can write comments that can then be entered and stored in the BPM/18-59 software. Users can also add up to 3 problems and/or strengths to be rated, key entered, and then displayed on the profile.

Brief Summary :

  • BPM forms are completed in 1 to 2 minutes by collaterals and by the person being assessed.
  • Internalizing, Attention Problems, Externalizing, & Total Problems scales
  • Parallel items & scales on the BPM/18-59 & the ASR and ABCL enable users to link comprehensive initial & outcome assessments to BPM/18-59 scores
  • Users can add items for assessing strengths & problems
  • Completed at user-selected periods of days, weeks, months

Normed Scale Scores

  • Norms for each gender at ages 18-35 and 36-59
  • Separate norms for collateral- & self-ratings
  • User-selected multicultural norms for dozens of societies

Computer Output

  • Computer output compares item ratings & normed scale scores from up to 4 informants
  • Trajectories of normed scale scores are displayed across multiple occasions

The following BPM Products are available: