Katrin Bruchmüller

Summary

Affiliation: University of Basel
Country: Switzerland

Publications

  1. ncbi Is ADHD diagnosed in accord with diagnostic criteria? Overdiagnosis and influence of client gender on diagnosis
    Katrin Bruchmüller
    Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry, University of Basel, Missionsstrasse 60 64, Basel, Switzerland
    J Consult Clin Psychol 80:128-38. 2012
  2. ncbi Diagnostically irrelevant information can affect the likelihood of a diagnosis of bipolar disorder
    Katrin Bruchmüller
    Department of Psychology, University of Tubingen, Tubingen, Germany
    J Affect Disord 116:148-51. 2009
  3. ncbi Misdiagnosing bipolar disorder--do clinicians show heuristic biases?
    Larissa Wolkenstein
    University of Tubingen, Tubingen, Germany
    J Affect Disord 130:405-12. 2011

Detail Information

Publications3

  1. ncbi Is ADHD diagnosed in accord with diagnostic criteria? Overdiagnosis and influence of client gender on diagnosis
    Katrin Bruchmüller
    Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry, University of Basel, Missionsstrasse 60 64, Basel, Switzerland
    J Consult Clin Psychol 80:128-38. 2012
    ..This may result in overdiagnosis. Furthermore, as ADHD is more frequent in males, a boy might be seen as a more prototypical ADHD child and might therefore receive an ADHD diagnosis more readily than a girl would...
  2. ncbi Diagnostically irrelevant information can affect the likelihood of a diagnosis of bipolar disorder
    Katrin Bruchmüller
    Department of Psychology, University of Tubingen, Tubingen, Germany
    J Affect Disord 116:148-51. 2009
    ..This variation, along with the theoretical approach of the therapist affected the likelihood of a bipolar diagnosis...
  3. ncbi Misdiagnosing bipolar disorder--do clinicians show heuristic biases?
    Larissa Wolkenstein
    University of Tubingen, Tubingen, Germany
    J Affect Disord 130:405-12. 2011
    ..Additionally, we examine therapeutic attributes that might influence diagnostic decisions as well as treatment consequences following a (mis-)diagnosis...