Publication | Open Access
A Self-Rating Depression Scale
9.5K
Citations
5
References
1965
Year
Psychological Co-morbiditiesMental Health MonitoringPsychiatryArousal ResponseMood SymptomDepressionPsychologySocial SciencesMood SpectrumSelf-rating Depression ScaleMental HealthGeneral Depression ScalesPsychiatric DisorderMedicineSelf-assessmentPsychopathologyNumerous Scales
Many depression scales exist, yet most are too general, lengthy, or time‑consuming to assess depression as a specific psychiatric disorder in clinical research. To address this gap, the authors developed a concise self‑rating depression scale that enables correlation of depressive disorder severity with physiological and treatment parameters.
The fact that there is a need for assessing depression, whether as an affect, a symptom, or a disorder is obvious by the numerous scales and inventories available and in use today. The need to assess depression simply and specifically as a psychiatric disorder has not been met by most scales available today. We became acutely aware of this situation in a research project where we needed to correlate both the presence and severity of a depressive disorder in patients with other parameters such as arousal response during sleep and changes with treatment of the depressive disorder. It was felt that the general depression scales used were insufficient for our purpose and that the more specific scales were also inadequate. These inadequacies related to factors such as the length of a scale or inventory being too long and too time consuming, especially for a patient
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1