Title:
Depression symptom dimensions as predictors of antidepressant treatment outcome: replicable evidence of interest - activity symptoms Author: R. Uher et al..
Not exact matches
Functional ability (Sickness Impact Profile: Physical Functioning
Dimension [SIP: PFD], bed disability days [BDDs], and restricted activity days [RADs]-RRB-; depressive
symptoms (Geriatric
Depression Scale [GDS]-RRB-; and use and cost of healthcare services (Medicare payments).
However, traditional objections to findings not based on clinical diagnostic categories are lessened by evidence that CMD are most validly represented as a single
dimension encompassing comorbid anxiety and
depression.43 — 45 One important problem is that measures such as the general health questionnaire may be prone to socioeconomic response bias, with those in lower occupational grades underreporting
symptoms.46
The measure taps nine primary
symptom dimensions: Somatization, Obsessive - Compulsive, Interpersonal Sensitivity,
Depression, Anxiety, Hostility, Phobic Anxiety, Paranoid Ideation, and Psychoticism.
The measure taps nine primary
symptom dimensions: Somatization, Obsessive — Compulsive, Interpersonal Sensitivity,
Depression, Anxiety, Hostility, Phobic Anxiety, Paranoid Ideation, and Psychoticism.
Four
dimensions of health - related quality of life were measured: general health (self - reported general health), physical health (absence or presence of functional limitations and illness
symptoms), emotional health (the Center for Epidemiologic Studies
Depression Scale and Rosenberg's self - esteem scale), and a school and social functioning scale.
Given the large body of evidence linking attachment insecurity to psychological distress (e.g.,
depression) in the transition from adolescence to emerging adulthood and across the lifespan, there is a need to better understand how attachment
dimensions (e.g., anxious, avoidant) influence depressive
symptoms during this developmental period.
To measure
depression and anxiety, the appropriate subscales of the short form of the
Symptom Checklist (SCL - 90), the Brief
Symptom Inventory (BSI)[32], were used to measure the effects of treatment on psychological dysfunction in
dimensions related to
symptoms of posttraumatic stress.
The primary assessed
symptom dimensions are somatization, obsessive - compulsive, interpersonal sensitivity,
depression, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, and psychoticism.
Epidemiological and clinical evidence indicates that SED is associated with multiple
dimensions of psychopathology, with more robust effects on externalizing problems, such as aggressive and delinquent behaviors, and a less robust, but still significant, association with internalizing
symptoms, such as anxiety and
depression [10 — 12, 14].
Children's depressive
symptoms were measured at age 8 (
Dimensions of
Depression Profile for Children and Adolescents) and age 19 (CES - D).