The Hamilton Depression Rating Scale: Has the Gold Standard Become a Lead Weight?
Centre for Addiction and Mental Health
Abstract
The Hamilton Depression Rating Scale has been the gold standard for the assessment of depression for more than 40 years. Criticism of the instrument has been increasing. The authors review studies published since the last major review of this instrument in 1979 that explicitly examine the psychometric properties of the Hamilton depression scale. The authors' goal is to determine whether continued use of the Hamilton depression scale as a measure of treatment outcome is justified. METHOD: MEDLINE was searched for studies published since 1979 that examine psychometric properties of the Hamilton depression scale. Seventy studies were identified and selected, and then grouped into three categories on the basis of the major psychometric properties examined-reliability, item-response characteristics, and validity.
The Hamilton depression scale's internal reliability is adequate, but many scale items are poor contributors to the measurement of depression severity; others have poor interrater and retest reliability. For many items, the format for response options is not optimal. Content validity is poor; convergent validity and discriminant validity are adequate. The factor structure of the Hamilton depression scale is multidimensional but with poor replication across samples.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 32.04
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 88
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Gold standard (test)
- Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression
- Psychology
- Rating scale
- Discriminant validity
- Clinical psychology
- Inter-rater reliability
- Depression (economics)