0000000000069697

AUTHOR

Cynthia D. Delmo

showing 6 related works from this author

Identification of minor affective disorders and implications for psychopharmacotherapy.

1991

Five hundred general practice patients with functional complaints were studied with the Polydiagnostic Interview (PODI) to see whether DSM-IIIR criteria were able to specify affective disorders satisfactorily. Almost one third of the patients received the diagnosis of depression not otherwise specified (NOS). When Research Diagnostic Criteria were applied to these patients more than 70% received specific diagnoses. A modification of DSM-IIIR algorithms enabled us to further specify diagnoses in subjects with depression NOS. On the 17-item Hamilton Depression Scale many of these patients reached scores of 13 or more which is severe enough to justify a therapy trial with antidepressants.

NosologyAdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyPsychometricsAdolescentPsychometricsResearch Diagnostic CriteriaMinor (academic)Adjustment DisordersmedicineHumansMedical diagnosisPsychiatrySomatoform DisordersDepression (differential diagnoses)AgedAged 80 and overPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesDepressive DisorderPrimary Health CareMood DisordersNot Otherwise SpecifiedTherapy TrialMiddle AgedAnxiety DisordersPsychophysiologic DisordersPsychiatry and Mental healthClinical PsychologyFemalePsychologyClinical psychologyJournal of affective disorders
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The concept of major depression. II. Agreement between six competing operational definitions in 600 psychiatric inpatients.

1991

Six operational definitions of the concept of major depression were submitted to empirical evaluation in 600 psychiatric inpatients. Special attention was given to the comparison of major depression in DSM-III-R and ICD-10. The data base created by a polydiagnostic interview revealed relevant classificatory differences between the six definitions under study. Sources of different diagnostic base rates were: inclusion or omission of anhedonia as an obligatory mood criterion; minimal number of syndrome criteria required for the syndrome diagnosis; different width and reference points of time criteria; exclusion rules for co-existing schizophrenic symptoms and for previous nonaffective and man…

medicine.medical_specialtyPsychometricsPsychometricsmedia_common.quotation_subjectGermanymedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)PsychiatryBiological PsychiatryDepression (differential diagnoses)media_commonPsychiatric Status Rating ScalesDepressive DisorderOperational definitionGeneral NeuroscienceAnhedoniaGeneral MedicineSyndromeAgreementHospitalizationPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologyMoodMild depressionmedicine.symptomPsychologyKappaEuropean archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience
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The use of research assistants in polydiagnostic research.

1988

Psychiatric Status Rating ScalesPsychiatry and Mental healthComputer scienceMental DisordersInterview PsychologicalAllied Health PersonnelHumansPharmacology (medical)General MedicineData sciencePharmacopsychiatry
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The concept of major depression. III. Concurrent validity of six competing operational definitions for the clinical ICD-9 diagnosis.

1991

The comparative validity of six operational diagnoses of major depression was evaluated in 600 psychiatric inpatients using the independently assessed clinical ICD-9 diagnoses as a yardstick. Agreement with, and positive predictive value for the ICD-9 categories of pure (endogenous and psychogenic) depression served as validation criteria; sensitivity of major depression diagnoses for detecting ICD-9 bipolar depressions was additionally used for examining the adequacy of width, time and exclusion criteria of the competing operational definitions. Three essential results were found. First, the "old" diagnostic definitions of RDC and FDC are superior to all newer definitions because they defi…

Affective Disorders PsychoticBipolar DisorderPsychometricsNeurotic DisordersPsychometricsConcurrent validityMEDLINEValidityDiagnosis DifferentialPsychogenic diseaseHumansPharmacology (medical)Medical diagnosisBiological PsychiatryDepression (differential diagnoses)Psychiatric Status Rating ScalesDepressive DisorderOperational definitionGeneral NeuroscienceGeneral MedicineHospitalizationPsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologySchizophreniaSchizophrenic PsychologyPsychologyClinical psychologyEuropean archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience
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The concept of major depression. I. Descriptive comparison of six competing operational definitions including ICD-10 and DSM-III-R.

1991

All operationalized diagnostic systems contain a diagnostic category, which corresponds to the concept of major depression. Yet, these corresponding definitions are not identical. Up to now, no comprehensive comparisons of the competing diagnoses have been published. We will therefore present a series of studies, describing six different operational definitions of major depression according to their content and construction and empirically comparing them in large inpatient and outpatient samples. This first paper presents a descriptive comparison of the definitions given in the Feighner Diagnostic Criteria, the Research Diagnostic Criteria, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Di…

Psychiatric Status Rating Scalesmedicine.medical_specialtyDepressive DisorderOperationalizationPsychometricsPsychometricsOperational definitionGeneral NeuroscienceConcurrent validityResearch Diagnostic CriteriaICD-10General MedicineSyndromePsychiatry and Mental healthNeuropsychology and Physiological PsychologymedicineHumansPharmacology (medical)Diagnostic Interview for Genetic StudiesMedical diagnosisPsychiatryPsychologyBiological PsychiatryClinical psychologyEuropean archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience
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Differentiation between major and minor depression

1992

Though the concept of Major Depression was generated by clinicians using depressed inpatients as models, a polydiagnostic study in 600 psychiatric inpatients with heterogenous psychological disturbances revealed that all six competing operational definitions of Major Depression (including DSM-III-R and ICD-10) were too restrictive to serve as a general concept of depression. Another polydiagnostic study in 500 primary care outpatients showed that more than two-thirds of all non-chronic depressed cases were below the severity threshold of Major Depression: these patients are classified as Depression Not Otherwise Specified (NOS) by DSM-III-R. Loosening of the over-restrictive time criteria w…

PharmacologyDepressive Disordermedicine.medical_specialtyHamilton depression scaleDepressionMajor and minorNot Otherwise SpecifiedDsm iii rICD-10Primary careDiagnosis DifferentialmedicineHumansAntidepressantPsychiatryPsychologyDepression (differential diagnoses)Clinical psychologyPsychopharmacology
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