Sensitivity and Specificity in Three Measures of Depression Among Mexican American Women |
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Authors: | Dellanira Valencia-Garcia Xiaoyu Bi Cecilia Ayón |
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Affiliation: | 1.School of Nursing and Health Professions,University of San Francisco,San Francisco,USA;2.VA Palo Alto Health Care System,Stanford University,Stanford,USA;3.Anthem Incorporated,San Jose,USA;4.University of California,Riverside,USA |
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Abstract: | This paper examined the prevalence of depressive symptomotology among women of Mexican ancestry (N?=?205), over the age of 18, of diverse incomes and nativity. We examined differences in rates of diagnosis by Spanish/English preference and the sensitivity and specificity of three common measures: the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ9), the Kessler Psychological Distress Scale (K-10), and depression questions from the Composite International Diagnostic Interview, Short Form (MDD CIDI-SF); PHQ9 was used as the “gold standard” measure. Results indicated 18–32?% of participants met criteria for depression with higher rates found among Spanish preference participants. The K-10 had significantly higher sensitivity (0.81) but lower specificity (0.79) than the MDD CIDI-SF items (0.57 and 0.89, respectively). This study suggests that the K-10 and MDD CIDI-SF measures are complementary to each other for screening of depressive symptomatology. Implications for cultural and linguistic assessment of depression are further discussed. |
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