RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Brief Rating of Aggression by Children and Adolescents (BRACHA): A Reliability Study JF Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law Online JO J Am Acad Psychiatry Law FD American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law SP 374 OP 382 VO 40 IS 3 A1 Barzman, Drew A1 Mossman, Douglas A1 Sonnier, Loretta A1 Sorter, Michael YR 2012 UL http://jaapl.org/content/40/3/374.abstract AB The Brief Rating of Aggression by Children and Adolescents (BRACHA) is a 14-item instrument scored by emergency room staff members to assess aggression risk during an upcoming psychiatric hospitalization. In this study, we investigated the inter-rater reliability of the BRACHA 0.9, the latest version of the instrument. After receiving training based on the BRACHA 0.9 manual, 10 intake workers viewed 24 ten-minute videos in which child and adolescent actors portrayed pediatric emergency room patients with low, moderate, or high levels of risk for aggression during an upcoming hospitalization. We then evaluated inter-rater reliability for individual BRACHA items, using three measures of agreement, and reliability for total BRACHA 0.9 scores, using conventional (frequentist) methods and Bayesian techniques for calculating the intraclass correlation coefficient ICC (2,1). Inter-rater reliability for individual items ranged from good to almost perfect, with Kendall's W exceeding 0.75 for eight of 14 BRACHA items. The ICC (2,1) for the total BRACHA 0.9 score was 0.9099, with both conventional and Bayesian methods (95% credible interval 0.8530–0.9533), suggesting an excellent level of overall agreement. The BRACHA appears to be an accurate, highly reliable instrument for assessing the risk of aggression by children and adolescents who are about to undergo psychiatric hospitalization.