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RESEARCH PRODUCT
A polydiagnostic scale for dimensional classification of endogenous depression. Derivation and validation.
Michael PhilippWolfgang Maiersubject
AdultMalePsychiatric Status Rating Scalesmedicine.medical_specialtyDepressive DisorderBipolar DisorderPsychometricsScale (ratio)Neurotic DisordersPsychometricsResearch Diagnostic CriteriaTest validityPsychiatry and Mental healthAdjustment DisordersManuals as TopicLatent traitEndogenous depressionmedicineSchizophreniaHumansFemaleMedical diagnosisPsychiatryPsychologyDepression (differential diagnoses)description
Several operational diagnoses (OPD) for endogenous depression have been proposed. However--though aiming at similar clinical concepts--the amount of association and agreement between different OPD is rather low. In this study the relationship between eight OPD (Research Diagnostic Criteria, DSM-III, Michigan Discrimination Index, Newcastle Scale I, Newcastle Scale II, Taylor-Abrams Criteria, Vienna Research Criteria, Hamilton Endogenomorphy Index) was assessed by applying latent trait analyses to the classificatory data of these eight OPD which were rated simultaneously in a sample of 173 depressive inpatients. According to these analyses six OPD (RDC, DSM-III, NCS-I, NCS-II, TAC and VRC) are tapping the same phenomenon. This latent trait represents compatible concepts of endogenous depression; it is strongly associated with the independently assessed clinical ICD-9 diagnosis of endogenous depression. The six OPD can be considered as items of a scale (so-called OPD-scale). The total scores of the OPD-scale represent a dimensional assessment of the decisiveness of the diagnosis endogenous depression. Coefficients and parameters of this new scale are presented.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1986-08-01 | Acta psychiatrica Scandinavica |