Law and Human Behavior, Vol. 13, No. 1, 1989 Screening for in Jails Severe Mental Disorder The Development of the Referral Decision Scale* Linda A. Teplint and James Swartz$ Despite the demonstrated prevalence of severe mental disorder among jail detainees and the legal mandate to provide mental health services, most jails do not have the resources to incorporate tradi- tional~ time-consuming psychological assessment techniques into their routine intake process. As a result, a number of mentally ill jail detainees remain undetected and untreated. This study outlines the development of the "Referral Decision Scale" (RDS), which detects persons who have a high prob- ability of having a severe mental disorder so that they can be given a complete diagnostic evaluation. The 14-item RDS was statistically derived using discriminant analysis from data collected via the NIMH Diagnostic Interview Schedule on 728 randomly selected male jail detainees and then validated on 1,149 prison inmates. The final validated version of the RDS had an overall sensitivity of 0.791, specificity of 0.987, and positive and negative predictive value of 0.791 and 0.013, respectively. Since these statistics far exceed current detection rates, the RDS is likely to facilitate the diversion of mentally ill detainees in situations where it is impractical to administer psychological examinations to all incoming inmates. Training requirements for the RDS and directions for future research are dis- cussed. * This research was supported in part by National Institute of Mental Health under grant No. R01MH37988. We would like to thank Karl Kilgore, Stuart Michaels, John Lyons, Karen Abram, Richard White, and Christine Davidson for their statistical insights and helpful comments. James Collins is due special thanks for making his North Carolina prison data available. We are also grateful to Philip Hardiman, Thomas Monahan, and Ronald Simmons for their cooperation with the data-collection process. Reprint requests should be sent to: Linda A. Teplin, Ph.D., Northwestern University Medical School, 215 E. Chicago Ave., Suite 708, Chicago, Illinois 60611. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Psycho-legal Studies Program, Northwest- ern University Medical School, and Northwestern Memorial Hospital. Treatment Alternatives to Street Crime, Inc., Chicago, Illinois. 1 0147-7307/89/0300-0001506.00/0 9 1989 Plenum Publishing Corporation This document is copyrighted by the American Psychological Association or one of its allied publishers. This article is intended solely for the personal use of the individual user and is not to be disseminated broadly.