articlePsychological MedicineAug 1, 2002Closed access

Short screening scales to monitor population prevalences and trends in non-specific psychological distress

Harvard University · Massachusetts Mental Health Center · +1 more institution

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

A 10-question screening scale of psychological distress and a six-question short-form scale embedded within the 10-question scale were developed for the redesigned US National Health Interview Survey (NHIS).

Methods

Initial pilot questions were administered in a US national mail survey (N = 1401). A reduced set of questions was subsequently administered in a US national telephone survey (N = 1574). The 10-question and six-question scales, which we refer to as the K10 and K6, were constructed from the reduced set of questions based on Item Response Theory models. The scales were subsequently validated in a two-stage clinical reappraisal survey (N = 1000 telephone screening interviews in the first stage followed by N = 153 face-to-face clinical interviews in the second stage that oversampled first-stage respondents who screened positive for emotional problems) in a local convenience sample. The second-stage sample was administered the screening scales along with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID). The K6 was subsequently included in the 1997 (N = 36116) and 1998 (N = 32440) US National Health Interview Survey, while the K10 was included in the 1997 (N = 10641) Australian National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being.

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10,192
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References
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Authors

8

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • National Health Interview Survey
  • Distress
  • Percentile
  • Population
  • Psychology
  • Telephone interview
  • Scale (ratio)
  • Mental health
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Reduced inequalities
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