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‘Do you think you suffer from depression?’ Reevaluating the use of a single item question for the screening of depression in older primary care patients

✍ Scribed by Liat Ayalon; Margalit Goldfracht; Per Bech


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2010
Tongue
English
Weight
100 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objectives

The majority of older adults seek depression treatment in primary care. Despite impressive efforts to integrate depression treatment into primary care, depression often remains undetected. The overall goal of the present study was to compare a single item screening for depression to existing depression screening tools.

Methods

A cross sectional sample of 153 older primary care patients. Participants completed several depression‐screening measures (e.g. a single depression screen, Patient Health Questionnaire‐9, Major Depression Inventory, Visual Analogue Scale). Measures were evaluated against a depression diagnosis made by the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM‐IV.

Results

Overall, 3.9% of the sample was diagnosed with depression. The most notable finding was that the single‐item question, ‘do you think you suffer from depression?’ had as good or better sensitivity (83%) than all other screens. Nonetheless, its specificity of 83% suggested that it has to be followed up by a through diagnostic interview. Additional sensitivity analyses concerning the use of a single depression item taken directly from the depression screening measures supported this finding.

Conclusions

An easy way to detect depression in older primary care patients would be asking the single question, ‘do you think you suffer from depression?’ Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.